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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Does exercise keep your brain running?



Moving the body demands a lot from the brain. Exercise activates countless neurons, which generate, receive and interpret repeated, rapid-fire messages from the nervous system, coordinating muscle contractions, vision, balance, organ function and all of the complex interactions of bodily systems that allow you to take one step, then another.
This increase in brain activity naturally increases the brain’s need for nutrients, but until recently, scientists hadn’t fully understood how neurons fuel themselves during exercise. Now a series of animal studies from Japan suggest that the exercising brain has unique methods of keeping itself fueled. What’s more, the finely honed energy balance that occurs in the brain appears to have implications not only for how well the brain functions during exercise, but also for how well our thinking and memory work the rest of the time.Phys Ed
For many years, scientists had believed that the brain, which is a very hungry organ, subsisted only on glucose, or blood sugar, which it absorbed from the passing bloodstream. But about 10 years ago, some neuroscientists found that specialized cells in the brain, known as astrocytes, that act as support cells for neurons actually contained small stores of glycogen, or stored carbohydrates. And glycogen, as it turns out, is critical for the health of cells throughout the brain.
In petri dishes, when neurons, which do not have energy stores of their own, are starved of blood sugar, their neighboring astrocytes undergo a complex physiological process that results in those cells’ stores of glycogen being broken down into a form easily burned by neurons. This substance is released into the space between the cells and the neurons swallow it, maintaining their energy levels.
But while scientists knew that the brain had and could access these energy stores, they had been unable to study when the brain’s stored energy was being used in actual live conditions, outside of petri dishes, because brain glycogen is metabolized or burned away very rapidly after death; it’s gone before it can be measured.
That’s where the Japanese researchers came in. They had developed a new method of using high-powered microwave irradiation to instantly freeze glycogen levels at death, so that the scientists could accurately assess just how much brain glycogen remained in the astrocytes or had recently been used.
In the first of their new experiments, published last year in The Journal of Physiology, scientists at the Laboratory of Biochemistry and Neuroscience at the University of Tsukuba gathered two groups of adult male rats and had one group start a treadmill running program, while the other group sat for the same period of time each day on unmoving treadmills. The researchers’ aim was to determine how much the level of brain glycogen changed during and after exercise.
Using their glycogen detection method, they discovered that prolonged exercise significantly lowered the brain’s stores of energy, and that the losses were especially noticeable in certain areas of the brain, like the frontal cortex and the hippocampus, that are involved in thinking and memory, as well as in the mechanics of moving.
The findings of their subsequent follow-up experiment, however, were even more intriguing and consequential. In that study, which appears in this month’s issue of The Journal of Physiology, the researchers studied animals after a single bout of exercise and also after four weeks of regular, moderate-intensity running.
After the single session on the treadmill, the animals were allowed to rest and feed, and then their brain glycogen levels were studied. The food, it appeared, had gone directly to their heads; their brain levels of glycogen not only had been restored to what they had been before the workout, but had soared past that point, increasing by as much as a 60 percent in the frontal cortex and hippocampus and slightly less in other parts of the brain. The astrocytes had “overcompensated,” resulting in a kind of brain carbo-loading.
The levels, however, had dropped back to normal within about 24 hours.
That was not the case, though, if the animals continued to exercise. In those rats that ran for four weeks, the “supercompensation” became the new normal, with their baseline levels of glycogen showing substantial increases compared with the sedentary animals. The increases were especially notable in, again, those portions of the brain critical to learning and memory formation — the cortex and the hippocampus.
Which is why the findings are potentially so meaningful – and not just for rats.
While a brain with more fuel reserves is potentially a brain that can sustain and direct movement longer, it also “may be a key mechanism underlying exercise-enhanced cognitive function,” says Hideaki Soya, a professor of exercise biochemistry at the University of Tsukuba and senior author of the studies, since supercompensation occurs most strikingly in the parts of the brain that allow us better to think and to remember. As a result, Dr. Soya says, “it is tempting to suggest that increased storage and utility of brain glycogen in the cortex and hippocampus might be involved in the development” of a better, sharper brain.
Given the limits of current technologies, brain glycogen metabolism cannot be studied in people. But even so, the studies’ findings make D.I.Y. brain-fuel supercompensation efforts seem like an attractive possibility. And, according to unpublished data from Dr. Soya’s lab, the process may even be easy.
He and his colleagues have found that “glycogen supercompensation in some brain loci” is “enhanced in rats receiving carbohydrates immediately after exhaustive exercise.” So for people, that might mean that after a run or other exercise that is prolonged or strenuous enough to leave you tired, a bottle of chocolate milk or a banana might be just the thing your brain is needing.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Dieting slows down your body’s metabolism

Dieting slows down your body’s metabolism
London: Losing weight is twice as hard as you may think as reducing your calorie intake slows down your metabolism, say scientists.

They said that dieters’ expectations have been too high, and official guidance that cutting 500 calories a day will result in a pound of weight being lost a week is plain wrong, the Daily Mail reported.

But dieters need not worry, as the same experts have created an online calculator that allows would-be slimmers to adjust their expectations and gain a more realistic picture of what they can expect to achieve.

The Body Weight Simulator website – at bwsimulator.niddk.nih.gov – estimates how much less that person will have to eat, or how much more exercise they’ll have to do reach their goal.

Official advice in the UK and the U.S. has long been that cutting out 500 calories a day will lead to weight loss of a pound a week.

But the calculation assumes that weight loss is steady and does not take into account that a person’s metabolism slows down as they lose weight, making subsequent pounds harder to shed.
This means weight is twice as hard to shift, the researchers said at the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s annual conference.

The old system says that cutting 100 calories a day will lead to the loss of 10lb a year. The revised rule predicts just 5lb will be shifted.

Rather than expecting too much, dieters should be patient, said Boyd Swinburn, an obesity expert from Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia.

Advising slimmers not to set their sights on more than a half a pound of weight loss a week, he said: “This is extremely good. This is a marathon not a sprint.”

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Poor Sleep Quality Diminishes Cognitive Functioning

Sufficient sleep is essential for optimum cognitive and psychological functioning. Diminished sleep quality is associated with depression and anxiety, but the extent to which poor sleep quality uniquely impacts attention and executive functions independent of the effects of the common underlying features of depression and anxiety requires further exploration. Here 67 healthy young adults were given the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, second edition (MMPI-2), the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), and tests of attention and executive functions. Similar to findings from a previous study with healthy community-based older adults (Nebes, Buysse, Halligan, Houck, & Monk, 2009), participants who reported poor sleep quality on the PSQI endorsed significantly greater scores on MMPI-2 Restructured Clinical scales related to depression and anxiety (Cohen's d = 0.77–1.05). In addition, PSQI component scores indexing poor sleep quality, duration, and medication use were associated with diminished attention and executive functions, even after controlling for emotional reactivity or demoralization (rs = 0.21–0.27). These results add to the concurrent validity of the PSQI, and provide further evidence for subtle cognitive decrements related to insufficient sleep even in healthy young adults. Future extension of these findings is necessary with larger samples and clinical comparison groups, and using objective indices of sleep dysfunction such as polysomnography.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

No couch potatoes here

Potato is high-fibre vegetable loaded with a rich array of nutrients like vitamins B6 and C, copper, potassium, and manganese
Diet Desk | Madhuri Ruia
The potato is usually synonymous with all things unhealthy —the words fat, starch, carbohydrate come to mind. A couch potato is something no one aspires to be. Yet the humble tuber is a hot favourite in almost all cuisines around the world and is well known as a versatile and tempting vegetable. From batata vada and aloo chat to aloo parantha, aloo gobi and dum aloo, the potato is an integral part of just about any Indian dish. In fact, there is a potato-based favourite dish for every palate. Several top-notch fast food enterprises make a big deal about marketing crispier, tastier potato chips, while others are busy researching the perfect potato to make the tastiest French fries—crisp on the outside, and light and fluffy inside.
Tuber guide: Eat with the skin on.
Tuber guide: Eat with the skin on.
The fact is that the potato is far from unhealthy. It’s a high-fibre vegetable loaded with a rich array of nutrients like vitamins B6 and C, copper, potassium, and manganese. However, for potatoes to retain these nutrients, they have to be baked in their skin, and not deep fried, which makes them unhealthy. Potatoes with their skins retain their fibre and vitamin C and a medium-sized baked potato is just 100 calories. Deep frying more than doubles the fat calories because the potato absorbs a lot of oil.
Potatoes also contain several health-promoting antioxidants, compounds like carotenoids, flavonoids and caffeic acid, and are a major source of energy. Contrary to popular belief, baked potatoes with skins (jacket potatoes) when not loaded with sour cream or cheese, have a lower glycaemic index because of the fibre available from the skin. Mashed potatoes do not contain fibre and have a higher glycaemic index (GI) of 96 (a GI of 70 or more is considered high, 100g baked potatoes have a GI of approximately 50-76 depending on the quality of the potato). Similarly, deep-fried potatoes have a high GI. Foods with high GI are fattening because they are broken in the body faster than high fibre foods, which make you feel hungry within a couple of hours.
Before cooking potatoes, clean them thoroughly with a brush under running water. Ensure that you choose those that are firm in texture. Discard ones that have a greenish discoloration and have sprouts because this indicates that the potato is old and contains toxins. When potatoes have all their nutrients intact, they are a convenient and tasty health food that can go a long way in improving the health profile of people in many ways.
Benefits of consuming jacket potatoes (100g a day):
• A single baked potato (100g) provides almost 12% of fibre intake of our daily requirement (which should be 25-30g) and acts like a bulking agent to improve digestion and bowel movements.
• It helps you beat stress because it provides 27% of the daily requirement of vitamin B6. Vitamin B6 is required for cellular health and a healthy nervous system.
• It lowers blood homocysteine levels (homocysteine is a toxic by-product of protein metabolism in the body) and maintains a healthy heart. Homocysteine level of less than 10 mmol/l is desirable since a high level can increase the risk of heart disease.
• It can potentially lower blood pressure because it contains a blood pressure lowering compound called kukoamine. However, several smaller servings of potato may be required for this. Diabetic or overweight people can also have potatoes, provided these are the only starch component in the meal instead of chapatti, rice or bread.
• Eat a jacket potato before going to bed; season it with flaxseed oil, salt and chilli powder if you wish. This will improve sleep quality, improve morning energy and mood for the day.
• Jacket potatoes can replace carbohydrates like chapatti and wholewheat bread for those on a weight-loss plan because they are an excellent source of sustained energy. With the skin, potatoes become a more complex food. The skin of the potato and its natural high-fibre content prevents sugar and junk food cravings.
Madhuri Ruia is a nutritionist and Pilates expert. She runs InteGym in Mumbai, which advocates workouts with healthy diets.
Write to Madhuri at dietdesk@livemint.com

Monday, February 13, 2012

Too much TV IS bad for children: The heart attack risk facing young couch potato

Square eyes: Children who watched a large amount of television were found to have narrowed arteries behind the eyes Square eyes: Children who watched a large amount of television were found to have narrowed arteries behind the eyes


Lazy: On average, children spent 1.9 hours per day watching TV or playing on their computer Lazy: On average, children spent 1.9 hours per day watching TV or playing on their computer

Too much TV IS bad for children: The heart attack risk facing young couch potatoes

By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 9:36 AM on 21st April 2011

Children as young as six are risking heart problems in later life because they are allowed to spend too much time watching TV or playing on computers, scientists warn.
A study of 1,492 primary school pupils found that those who spent hours glued to the screen suffered narrowing of blood  vessels in their eyes – an early warning sign of increased  likelihood of heart disease and high blood pressure.
But those who exercised for one hour a day were significantly healthier.


The study was carried out by Dr Bamini Gopinath and a team of researchers at the University of Sydney.
Parents answered a questionnaire detailing the amount of time their children spent watching TV, playing video games, reading and engaging in indoor and outdoor physical activity.
Scientists then took digital photographs of the blood vessels at the back of each child’s eye and calculated their size.
They also measured height, weight, body mass index and  blood pressure.
They found on average, children spent 1.9 hours per day watching TV or playing on their computer and only 36 minutes doing physical activity.
They had an average ‘retinal arteriolar’ narrowing of  2.3 microns.
But those who regularly participated in outdoor physical activity had retinal blood vessels that were 2.2 microns wider.
Dr Gopinath said that ‘replacing one hour a day of screen time with physical activity’ could be enough to stop the effects.

Children under two should not be allowed to watch any TV, experts say.
Older children should watch no more than two hours a day, the researchers at the Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Centre in Seattle said.
Each hour in front of the TV increased a child's chances of attention deficit disorder by 10%, their research in the Pediatrics journal showed.
The study of 1,345 children showed three hours TV a day made children 30% more likely to have the disorder.
Dr Dimitri Christakis at the children's hospital led the study. He said: "The newborn brain develops very rapidly during the first two to three years of life. It's really being wired."
Children who were exposed to the unrealistic levels of stimulation at a young age continued to expect this in later life, leading to difficulty dealing with the slower pace of school and homework, he said.
"TV can cause the developing mind to experience unnatural levels of stimulation," he said.
Rapid
This was made worse by the rapid image change that television makers used to keep young children interested, Dr Christakis added.
Parents were questioned about their children's viewing habits and asked to rate their behaviour at age seven on a scale similar to that used to diagnose attention deficit disorders.
The youngsters who watched the most television were more likely to rank within the top 10% for concentration problems, impulsiveness, restlessness and being easily confused.
Frederick Zimmerman of the University of Washington in Seattle, another of the authors, said it was impossible to say what a "safe" level of TV viewing would be for children between the ages of one and three.

"Each hour has an additional risk. You might say there's no safe level since there's a small but increased risk with each hour," he said.
"Things are a trade-off. Some parents might want to take that risk. We didn't find a safe level in that sense."
Between three and five per cent of children in the US are diagnosed with attention deficit disorder.
The researchers admitted there could be problems in the study as the parents' views may not be totally accurate.