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Moderate physical activity keep elder adults mentally strong

 

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New study says Older adults who regularly do moderate physical activity perform better in mental tasks.  The findings were reported in the journal PLOS ONE.

The researchers also used functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to observe how blood oxygen levels changed in the brain over time, reflecting each participant's brain activity at rest. They evaluated the microscopic integrity of each person's white-matter fibers, which carry nerve impulses and interconnect the brain.

"We looked at 100 adults between the ages of 60 and 80, and we used accelerometres to objectively measure their physical activity over a week," said one of the lead researchers Agnieszka Burzynska, professor at Colorado State University in the US.

"We found that spontaneous brain activity showed more moment-to-moment fluctuations in the more-active adults," Burzynska noted.

"In a previous study, we showed that in some of the same regions of the brain, those people who have higher brain variability also performed better on complex cognitive tasks, especially on intelligence tasks and memory," Burzynska pointed out.


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