Exercise
may improve memory and re-restoration of neurotransmitters in the
brainD. Ibrahim bin Hassan
Khudair
Usually, the mice when advancing age impair memory, and can hardly identify the places that they know when they were at a younger age. It has been discovered that this result contraction of a certain part of the brain and therefore affect memory in mice. After 12 weeks of voluntary running mice found that mice that have done so have improved their mental state as well as the memory then, as well as the part that shrank back to its former status.
This is what Dr. Michael Valenzuela and his colleagues from the University of Sydney in Australia, and this study were published in the
Biological Psychiatry (Psychiatry organic).
Seems that exercise benefit the brain in humans, as is the case in mice, in a study of people aged between 45 and 88 years, They are who exercises regularly, and the marks that define Alzheimer's and known as Amyloid plaques low by rating of the American Society for heart disease, and there is no difference between these and the people who practice exercise less. The study pointed out that the exercise benefit on memory and delay Alzheimer's, even when they were carrying APOE-e4, an indicator of the risk of Alzheimer's disease.
Usually, the mice when advancing age impair memory, and can hardly identify the places that they know when they were at a younger age. It has been discovered that this result contraction of a certain part of the brain and therefore affect memory in mice. After 12 weeks of voluntary running mice found that mice that have done so have improved their mental state as well as the memory then, as well as the part that shrank back to its former status.
This is what Dr. Michael Valenzuela and his colleagues from the University of Sydney in Australia, and this study were published in the
Biological Psychiatry (Psychiatry organic).
Seems that exercise benefit the brain in humans, as is the case in mice, in a study of people aged between 45 and 88 years, They are who exercises regularly, and the marks that define Alzheimer's and known as Amyloid plaques low by rating of the American Society for heart disease, and there is no difference between these and the people who practice exercise less. The study pointed out that the exercise benefit on memory and delay Alzheimer's, even when they were carrying APOE-e4, an indicator of the risk of Alzheimer's disease.
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