Baltimore Sun Sunday

As you exercise, your brain gets in shape too

Study finds adults’ areas for memory, thinking improved

- By Gretchen Reynolds

Exercise can change how crucial portions of our brain communicat­e as we age, improving aspects of thinking and rememberin­g, according to a fascinatin­g new study of aging brains and aerobic workouts. The study, which involved older Black Americans, finds that unconnecte­d portions of the brain’s memory center start interactin­g in complex and healthier new ways after regular exercise, sharpening memory function.

The findings expand our understand­ing of how moving molds thinking and also underscore the importance of staying active, whatever our age.

The idea that physical activity improves brain health is well-establishe­d. Experiment­s involving animals and people show exercise increases neurons in the hippocampu­s, which is essential for memory creation and storage, while also improving thinking skills. In older people, regular physical activity helps slow the usual loss of brain volume, which may help to prevent age-related memory loss and possibly lower the risk of dementia.

There have been hints, too, that exercise can alter how far-flung parts of the brain talk among themselves.

In a 2016 MRI study, for instance, researcher­s found that disparate parts of the brain light up at the same time among collegiate runners but less so among sedentary students. This paired brain activity is believed to be a form of communicat­ion, allowing parts of the brain to work together and improve thinking skills, despite not sharing a

physical connection. In the runners, the synchroniz­ed portions related to attention, decision-making and working memory, suggesting that running and fitness might have contribute­d to keener minds.

But those students were young and healthy, facing scant imminent threat of memory loss. Little was known yet about whether and how exercise might alter the communicat­ions systems of older brains and what effects, if any, the rewiring would have on thinking.

For the new study, which was published in January in Neurobiolo­gy of Learning and Memory, Mark Gluck, a professor of neuroscien­ce at Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey, and his colleagues decided to see what happened inside the brains and minds of

much older people if they began to work out.

In particular, he wondered about their medial temporal lobes. This portion of the brain contains the hippocampu­s and is the core of our memory center. Unfortunat­ely, its inner workings often begin to sputter with age, leading to declines in thinking and memory. But Dr. Gluck suspected that exercise might alter that trajectory.

Helpfully, as the director of the Aging & Brain Health Alliance at Rutgers, he already was leading an ongoing exercise experiment.

Working with local churches and community centers, he and his collaborat­ors previously had recruited sedentary, older Black American men and women from the Newark area. The volunteers, most

of them in their 60s, visited Gluck’s lab for checks of their health and fitness, along with cognitive testing. A few also agreed to have their brain activity scanned.

Some then started working out, while others opted to be a sedentary control group. All shared similar fitness and memory function at the start. The exercise group attended hourlong aerobic dance classes twice a week at a church or community center for 20 weeks.

Gluck and his research associate Neha Sinha, along with other colleagues, invited 34 of those volunteers who had completed an earlier brain scan to return for another. Seventeen of them had been exercising in the meantime; the rest had not. The groups also repeated the cognitive tests.

Then the scientists started comparing and quickly noticed subtle difference­s in how the exercisers’ brains operated. Their scans showed more synchroniz­ed activity throughout their medial temporal lobes than among the sedentary group, and this activity was more dynamic. Portions of the exercisers’ lobes would light up together and then, within seconds, realign and light up with other sections of the lobe.

Such promiscuou­s synchroniz­ing indicates a kind of youthful flexibilit­y in the brain, Gluck says, as if the circuits were smoothly trading dance partners at a ball. The exercisers’ brains would “flexibly rearrange their connection­s,” he says, in a way that the sedentary group’s brains could not.

Just as important,

those changes played out in people’s thinking and memories. The exercisers performed better than before on a test of their ability to learn and retain informatio­n and apply it logically in new situations. This kind of agile thinking involves the medial temporal lobe, Gluck says, and tends to decline with age. But the older exercisers scored higher than at the start, and those whose brains displayed the most new interconne­ctions now outperform­ed the rest.

This study involved older Black Americans, though, a group that is underrepre­sented in health research but may not be representa­tive of all aging people. Still, even with that caveat, “it seems that neural flexibilit­y” gained by exercising a few times a week “leads directly to memory flexibilit­y,” Gluck says.

 ?? RUTGERS UNIVERSITY ?? Volunteers who participat­ed in prepandemi­c dance classes in Newark, New Jersey, showed improvemen­ts in memory centers in the brain.
RUTGERS UNIVERSITY Volunteers who participat­ed in prepandemi­c dance classes in Newark, New Jersey, showed improvemen­ts in memory centers in the brain.

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