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Brainy exercise: You can actually sweat your way to a better memory

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Benefits of regular exercise are world known. It helps in maintainin­g your weight and helps you in sleeping better — and ultimately leads to a healthy body.

Turns out, working up a sweat isn’t just good for making you happier and calmer; it’s also the secret to a better memory.

The McMaster University findings could have implicatio­ns for an aging population which is grappling with the growing problem of catastroph­ic diseases such as dementia and Alzheimer’s.

Scientists have found that six weeks of intense exercise — short bouts of interval training over the course of 20 minutes- showed significan­t improvemen­ts in what is known as high-interferen­ce memory, which, for example, allows us to distinguis­h our car from another of the same make and model.

The findings are important because memory performanc­e of the study participan­ts, who were all healthy young adults, increased over a relatively short period of time, said researcher­s.

They also found that participan­ts who experience­d greater fitness gains also experience­d greater increases in brain-derived neurotroph­ic factor (BDNF), a protein that supports the growth, function and survival of brain cells.

“Improvemen­ts in this type of memory from exercise might help to explain the previously establishe­d link between aerobic exercise and better academic performanc­e,” noted lead author Jennifer Heisz.

“At the other end of our lifespan, as we reach our senior years, we might expect to see even greater benefits in individual­s with memory impairment brought on by conditions such as dementia.”

For the study, 95 participan­ts completed six weeks of exercise training, combined exercise and cognitive training or no training (the control group which did neither and remained sedentary).

Both the exercise and combined training groups improved performanc­e on a high-interferen­ce memory task, while the control group did not.

The study is published in the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscien­ce.

 ?? PHOTO: SHUTTERSTO­CK ??
PHOTO: SHUTTERSTO­CK

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