Exercise has numerous beneficial effects on
Brain Health and Cognition, review suggests
Newswise, July 27, 2011—It’s no secret that
exercise has numerous beneficial effects on
the body. However, a bevy of recent research
suggests that these positive effects also
extend to the brain, influencing cognition.
In a new review article highlighting the
results of more than a hundred recent human
and animal studies on this topic, Michelle
W. Voss, of the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, and her colleagues show
that both aerobic exercise and strength
training play a vital role in maintaining
brain and cognitive health throughout life.
However, they also suggest that many
unanswered questions remain in the field of
exercise neuroscience—including how various
aspects of exercise influence brain
physiology and function and how human and
animal studies relate to each other—and
issue the call for further research to fill
in these gaps.
The article, “Exercise, Brain and Cognition
Across the Lifespan,” is published in the
online edition of the Journal of Applied
Physiology.
Methodology
Using the findings from 111 recent studies,
the researchers write a brief review
showcasing the effects of aerobic exercise
and strength training on humans ranging in
age from children to elderly adults. They
relate these findings to those in lab
animals, such as rats and mice, which
provide a window on the pathways through
which exercise may enhance brain function.
Results
The review suggests that aerobic exercise is
important for getting a head start during
childhood on cognitive abilities that are
important throughout life. For example,
physical inactivity is associated with
poorer academic performance and results on
standard neuropsychological tests, while
exercise programs appear to improve memory,
attention, and decision-making.
These effects also extend to young and
elderly adults, with solid evidence for
aerobic training benefiting executive
functions, including multi-tasking,
planning, and inhibition, and increasing the
volume of brain structures important for
memory.
Although few studies have evaluated the
effects of strength training on brain health
in children, studies in older adults suggest
that high-intensity and high-load training
can improve memory.
Animal studies, primarily models that test
the influence of aerobic exercise, suggest a
variety of mechanisms responsible for these
effects. For example, exercise appears to
change brain structure, prompting the growth
of new nerve cells and blood vessels. It
also increases the production of
neurochemicals, such as BDNF and IGF-1, that
promote growth, differentiation, survival,
and repair of brain cells.
Though this collection of studies clearly
reveals the beneficial effects of exercise
on the brain, it also highlights gaps in the
scientific literature. For example, the
review authors note that more research is
needed on how exercise type might promote
different effects on brain health and
cognition.
Similarly, they say, future research that
integrates human and animal work will be
necessary, such as studies that incorporate
exercise over animals’ life spans to
understand the effects of exercise at
different time points, or human studies that
include measures of BDNF, IGF-1, or other
neurobiological markers.
Importance of the Findings
The reviewed studies suggest that both
aerobic exercise and strength training can
have significant positive effects on brain
health and function, but more research is
needed to better elucidate these effects.
“It is increasingly prevalent in the print
media, television, and the Internet to be
bombarded with advertisements for products
and programs to enhance mental and physical
health in a relatively painless fashion
through miracle elixirs, computer-based
training, or gaming programs, or brief
exercise programs,” the authors say.
“Although there is little convincing
scientific evidence for such claims, there
have been some promising developments in the
scientific literature with regard to
physical activity and exercise effects on
cognitive and brain health.”