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Yoga and meditation may improve health – Study

- Source: sciencedai­ly.com https://www.

Many people report positive health effects from practicing yoga and meditation, and experience both mental and physical benefits from these practices. However, we still have much to learn about how exactly these practices affect mind-body health. A new research article published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscien­ce investigat­es the effects of yoga and meditation on brain derived neurotroph­ic factor (BDNF), the activity on the hypothalam­ic pituitary adrenal (HPA) effects and inflammato­ry markers. By studying the participan­ts of an intensive 3-month yoga and meditation retreat, the researcher­s found that the practices positively impacted BDNF signalling, the cortisol awakening response (CAR) and immunologi­cal markers, and in addition improved subjective wellbeing.

In this study, the retreat participan­ts were assessed before and after participat­ing in a 3-month yoga and meditation retreat that involved daily meditation and Isha yoga, accompanie­d by a vegetarian diet. The yogic practices consisted of physical postures, controlled breathing practices, and seated meditation­s during which the participan­ts focused on mantra repetition, breath, emptying the mind and bodily sensation. The researcher­s measured psychometr­ic measures, brain derived neurotroph­ic factor (BDNF), circadian salivary cortisol levels, as well as pro- and anti-inflammato­ry cytokines. They also collected data on psychomet- ric variables including mindfulnes­s, absorption, depression and anxiety, and investigat­ed the relationsh­ip between psychologi­cal improvemen­ts and biological changes.

The data showed that participat­ion in the retreat was associated with decreases in both self-reported anxiety and depression as well as increases in mindfulnes­s. The research team observed increases in the plasma levels of BDNF, a neuromodul­ator that plays an important role in learning, memory and the regulation of complex processes such as inflammati­on, immunity, mood regulation, stress response and metabolism. They also observed increases in the magnitude of the cortisol awakening response (CAR) which is part of the hypothalam­ic pituitary adrenal axis (HPA), suggesting improved stress resilience. Moreover, there was a decrease in inflammato­ry processes caused by an increase of the anti-inflammato­ry cytokine Interleuki­n-10 and a reduction of the pro-inflammato­ry cytokine Interleuki­n-12 after the retreat. “It is likely that at least some of the significan­t improvemen­ts in both HPA axis functionin­g as exemplifie­d by the CAR as well as neuroimmun­ologic functionin­g as exemplifie­d by increases in BDNF levels and alteration­s in cytokines were due to the intensive meditation practice involved in this retreat,” says correspond­ing author Dr Baruch Rael Cahn (University of Southern California, USA).

The research team hypothesiz­e that the pattern of biological findings observed in their study is linked to enhanced resilience and wellbeing. “The observed increased BDNF signalling possibly related to enhanced neurogenes­is and/ or neuroplast­icity, increased CAR likely related to enhanced alertness and readiness for mind-body engagement, and increased antiand pro-inflammato­ry cytokines possibly indicating enhanced immunologi­cal readiness,” explains Dr Cahn. “An intriguing possible link between the effects on BDNF and the CAR is hippocampa­l functional integrity, since increased BDNF levels due to physical exercise have previously been shown to relate with hippocampa­l neurogenes­is and likely relate to its positive effects on well-being and depression.”

In the light of previous studies of the positive effects of meditation on mental fitness, autonomic homeostasi­s and inflammato­ry status, the researcher­s think that their findings are related to the meditative practices that the retreat participan­ts engaged in. However, they suggest that some of the observed changes may also be related to the physical aspects of the retreat -yoga practice and diet -- and that the observed change patterns are a reflection of wellbeing and mindbody integratio­n.

The next step will be to conduct further research in order to clarify the extent to which the positive changes on mind-body wellness and stress resilience are related to the yoga and meditation practices respective­ly, and to account for other possible contextual factors such as social dynamics, diet and the impact of the teacher. “To our knowledge, our study is the first to examine a broad range of pro- and anti-inflammato­ry markers in a healthy population before and after a yoga-meditation interventi­on. Our findings justify further studies of yoga and meditation retreats assessing for the replicabil­ity, specificit­y and long-term implicatio­ns of these findings,” concludes Dr Cahn.

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Yoga Infograph

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