University
Of Illinois At Urbana-Champaign
01/28/2003
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- Three
key areas of the brain adversely affected by aging show the greatest benefit
when a person stays physically fit. The proof, scientists say, is visible in
the brain scans of 55 volunteers over age 55.
The
idea that fitness improves cognition in the aging is not new. Animal studies
have found that aerobic exercise boosts cellular and molecular components of
the brain, and exercise has improved problem-solving and other cognitive
abilities in older people. A new study in the February issue of the Journal of
Gerontology: Medical Sciences, however, is the first to show -- using
high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging -- anatomical differences in gray
and white matter between physically fit and less fit aging humans.
Gray
matter consists of thin layers of tissue of cell bodies such as neurons and
support cells that are critically involved in learning and memory. White matter
is the myelin sheath containing the nerve fibers that transmit signals
throughout the brain.
As
people age, especially after age 30, these tissues shrink in a pattern closely
matched by declines in cognitive performance, Kramer said.
The
authors, led by Arthur F. Kramer of the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, say that the findings "provide the first empirical
confirmation of the relationship between cardiovascular fitness and neural
degeneration as predicted" in various academic studies on aging and
cognition in both animal and human populations.
"We
found differences in three areas of the brain, the frontal, temporal and
parietal cortexes," Kramer said. "There were very distinct
differences particularly in two types of tissue, the gray matter and white
matter. Nobody has reported this before."
A
second Kramer-led study -- a meta-analysis (comprehensive data review) of 18
previous studies -- that will be published in March in Psychological Science,
suggests that older women, especially those on hormone-replacement therapy,
benefit more cognitively than do men from increased physical activity as they
age.
The
Journal of Gerontology study involved well-educated men and women aged 55 to
79. Their fitness ranged from sedentary to very fit, competitive-ready
athletes. Fitness was measured by results of one-mile-walking and treadmill
stress tests. Three-dimensional scans of the participants' brains were done
using MRI equipment at Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana. Applying voxel-based
morphometry, researchers estimated tissue atrophy in a point-by-point fashion
in the targeted regions of the brain.
"Interestingly,
we found that fitness per se didnÕt have any influence on brain density,"
said Kramer, a professor of psychology and member of the Beckman Institute for
Advanced Science and Technology at Illinois. "It
is fitness as it interacts with age that has the positive effects. Older adults
show a real decline in brain density in white and gray areas, but fitness
actually slows that decline."
In
the study, most other potential negative attributes -- smoking, diabetes,
drinking, dieting, etc. -- were factored out of the data equation, Kramer said.
"This,
to our knowledge, is the first human data providing a potential anatomical
account of the cognitive effects that we and others have found over the
years," Kramer said. "Our data also suggest that more research is
clearly needed to actually do a thorough examination of brain structure and
functioning, and the impact of interventions such as fitness and cognitive
training."
In
1999, Kramer and colleagues reported in the journal Nature that previously
sedentary people over age 60 who walked rapidly for 45 minutes three days a
week can significantly improve mental-processing abilities that decline with
age, and particularly tasks that rely heavily on the frontal lobes of the
brain.
For
their meta-analysis paper, researchers reviewed 18 intervention studies done
between 1966 and 2001 and involving hundreds of participants ages 55 and older.
Fitness training was found to show "robust but selective benefits for
cognition, with the largest fitness-induced benefits occurring for
executive-control processes."
Few
studies done in the early part of the time included women, but as data were
analyzed from later studies, Kramer said, "We found that gender had a
large effect; men simply don't benefit as much, so we went back through our own
data and asked why."
In
previous studies of mice whose ovaries had been removed, they noted a decline
in exercise and a drop in production of brain-derived neurotropin. When mice
were put back on estrogen, production of the brain molecule increased and so
did exercise activity.
In
women, Kramer said, the data showed a similar trend: Women on estrogen
replacement therapy benefited more than women not on it.
Other
main conclusions from the meta-analysis:
*
Exercise programs involving both aerobic exercise and strength training
produced better results on cognitive abilities than either one alone.
*
Older adults benefit more than younger adults do, possibly, Kramer said,
because older adults have more to gain as age-related declines become more
prevalent.
*
More than 30 minutes of exercise per session produce the greatest benefit, a
finding consistent with many existing guidelines for adults.
The
studies were funded by the National Institute on Aging (National Institutes of
Health) and the New York-based Institute for the Study of Aging.
"These
intriguing data suggest there may be one more possible benefit from regular
exercise," said Molly V. Wagster, program director for the Neuropsychology
of Aging, Neuroscience and Neuropsychology of Aging Program of the NIA, which
supported the work. "The study emphasizes the importance of continued
research on the potential role that exercise might play in reducing cognitive
decline with age."
Illinois
contributors to the Journal of Gerontology paper were Kramer; postdoctoral
researcher Stanley J. Colcombe; doctoral student Kirk I. Erickson; Andrew G.
Webb, professor of electrical and computer engineering; Neal Cohen, professor
of psychology; and Edward McAuley, professor of kinesiology. Naftali Raz of Wayne State University in Detroit also was a
co-author. Colcombe and Kramer performed the meta-analysis study.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued for
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this story, please credit University Of
Illinois At Urbana-Champaign as the original source. You may also
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/01/030128080418.htm