Your doctor is responsible for getting you recovered enough that you can do the exercises needed to prevent weight gain. I gained 30 pounds post stroke, getting to a BMI of 29, lost 20 of those pounds, still at a BMI of 26 even with all the walking I do. You don't want a thinner cortex after your stroke insults. You need all the brain power you can muster to somewhat recover. Is weight gain the primary reason you lost 5 cognitive years from your stroke?
Ask your doctor that question, she should know the answer.
New Study Finds Frightening Connection Between Weight Gain and Brain Health
It is pretty easy to gain weight as
you grow older. Metabolisms slow, hormones shift, and people generally
become less physically active as they age. But just because getting fatter may be inevitable doesn’t mean it doesn’t carry serious risks. Besides the increased likelihood of heart disease
(the number one killer of men and women in America), gaining weight can
do some serious damage to another arguably more essential organ — your
brain. As bodies get bigger, a new study finds, brains actually shrink.
Cortical
thinning, the phenomenon named in the study, refers to atrophy of the
cerebral cortex, the part of the brain where almost all information
processing occurs. The thinner the cortex, the greater the risk of
Alzheimer’s and other neurological diseases. Scientists have understood
that there is a link between healthy body weight and optimal brain
health, but few studies have looked at the direct role weight might
play. Based on what is already known about the cerebral cortex, study
author and neurologist Dr. Tatjana Rundek believed that obesity could
be connected to cortical thinning and overall brain atrophy.
To
test this, Rundek and her team recruited 1,289 people to compare their
bodies and brains over time. At the start of the study, their BMI and
waist circumference were measured and six years later, the participants’
brains were scanned using an MRI, in order to measure the thickness of
the cortex and brain volume. Out of everyone, 571 people had BMIs in the
25 to 30 range, which is considered overweight, and 371 people were
considered obese with BMIs 30 and higher. The higher the BMI, the
thinner the cortex, results revealed. Even after Rundek controlled for
variables that could change the cortex such as high blood pressure,
alcohol use and smoking, every unit increase in BMI was linked with a
0.098 millimeter thinner cortex for overweight individuals and a 0.207
mm thinner cortex for obese ones. “These associations were especially strong in those who were younger than 65, which adds weight to the theory that having poor health indicators in mid-life may increase the risk for brain aging and problems with memory and thinking skills in later life,” she warned. Having a larger waist was similarly associated with a thinner cortex, strengthening the link. To put it in perspective, in normal aging adults the overall thinning rate of the cortical mantle is between 0.01 and 0.10 mm per decade, but these findings indicate that being overweight or obese might speed up this process by another 10 years at least.
It is worth noting that the study demonstrates a correlation between weight and cortical thinning, but scientists are not at the point where they can confidently say putting on pounds causes brain thinning directly, or Alzheimer’s for that matter. The study also focused primarily on older participants with an average age of 64, but the data does give the younger man another reason to start and maintain healthy habits early on. It’s not just about looking good, it’s about having a big beautiful brain too.
“These
results are exciting because they raise the possibility that by losing
weight, people may be able to stave off aging of their brains and
potentially the memory and thinking problems that can come along with
brain aging,” Rundek said. “However, with the rising number of people
globally who are overweight or obese and the difficulty many experiences
with losing weight, obviously this is a concern for public health in
the future as these people age.”
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