Oman Daily Observer

Desk job is injurious to health

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IRON

plays a vital role in the developmen­t of the brain — too little can result in cognitive problems, too much promotes degenerati­ve diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

Iron deficiency is the most common nutritiona­l deficiency worldwide, causing poor cognitive achievemen­t in school-aged children. Now it has been found to affect the brain’s structure as well.

Paul Thompson, professor of neurology at the University of California Los Angeles, and colleagues measured levels of transferri­n, a protein that transports iron throughout the body and brain, in adolescent­s.

Since both a deficiency and an excess of iron can negatively

physical impact brain function, the body’s regulation of iron transport to the brain is crucial, the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences reports.

When iron levels are low, the liver produces more transferri­n for increased iron transport.

The researcher­s wanted to know whether brain structure in healthy adults was also de- pendent on transferri­n levels, according to a California statement.

“We found that healthy brain wiring in adults depended on having good iron levels in your teenage years,” said Thompson, member of California’s Lab of Neuro Imaging.

“This connection was a lot stronger than we expected, especially as we were looking at people who were young and healthy — none of them would be considered iron-deficient.

“We also found a connection with a gene that explains why this is so. The gene itself seems to affect brain wiring, which was a big surprise,” he said.

Thompson’s findings are based on MRI scans on 615 healthy young-adult twins and siblings, who had an average age of 23.

By averaging the subjects’ transferri­n levels, which had been assessed repeatedly — at 12, 14 and 16 years of age — the researcher­s estimated iron availabili­ty to the brain during adolescenc­e, Thompson said. — IANS ABRITISH

study has said people in desk jobs could be compromisi­ng with their health as it often perpetrate­s a sedentary lifestyle.

According to the research, sitting at a desk all day means you are more likely to slump on the sofa at home and perform no exercise.

The average office worker spends five hours 41 minutes daily at their desk, almost as long as the seven hours they spend sleeping, the Daily Express reported.

These deskbound workers are more likely to turn into couch potatoes, increasing their risk of obesity, says the researcher­s at the Loughborou­gh University, a researchba­sed campus university in Britain’s Leicesters­hire county.

The trend is partly blamed on technology making it simpler for lazy people at offices to e-mail a colleague rather than walking over to see them, it adds.

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