Another item for our doctors to add to their vast repertoire of stroke rehab. You do want your survivor to be alert and have better cognitive performance, don't you? The downside would be swallowing the gum, questioning your doctor. Ok, this will never occur unless you're willing to create a gum that has a safety line so it can't be swallowed. Bazooka Joe for me.
I covered a lot of this earlier here:
The latest one here:
Abstract
In recent years, chewing has been
discussed as producing effects of maintaining and sustaining cognitive
performance. We have reported that chewing may improve or recover the
process of working memory; however, the mechanisms underlying these
phenomena are still to be elucidated. We investigated the effect of
chewing on aspects of attention and cognitive processing speed, testing
the hypothesis that this effect induces higher cognitive performance.
Seventeen healthy adults (20-34 years old) were studied during attention
task with blood oxygenation level-dependent functional (fMRI) at 3.0 T
MRI. The attentional network test (ANT) within a single task fMRI
containing two cue conditions (no cue and center cue) and two target
conditions (congruent and incongruent) was conducted to examine the
efficiency of alerting and executive control. Participants were
instructed to press a button with the right or left thumb according to
the direction of a centrally presented arrow. Each participant underwent
two back-to-back ANT sessions with or without chewing gum, odorless and
tasteless to remove any effect other than chewing. Behavioral results
showed that mean reaction time was significantly decreased during
chewing condition, regardless of speed-accuracy trade-off, although
there were no significant changes in behavioral effects (both alerting
and conflict effects). On the other hand, fMRI analysis revealed higher
activations in the anterior cingulate cortex and left frontal gyrus for
the executive network and motor-related regions for both attentional
networks during chewing condition. These results suggested that chewing
induced an increase in the arousal level and alertness in addition to an
effect on motor control and, as a consequence, these effects could lead
to improvements in cognitive performance.
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