So before your doctor tests your cognitive abilities make sure you get in 10 minutes of exercise. Bias those results and confound your doctor.
Rapid stimulation of human dentate gyrus function with acute mild exercise - 10 minutes
- Edited by Bruce McEwen, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, and approved August 14, 2018 (received for review April 19, 2018)
Significance
Our
previous work has shown that mild physical exercise can promote better
memory in rodents. Here, we use functional MRI in healthy young adults
to assess the immediate impact of a short bout of mild exercise on the
brain mechanisms supporting memory processes. We find that this brief
intervention rapidly enhanced highly detailed memory processing and
resulted in elevated activity in the hippocampus and the surrounding
regions, as well as increased coupling between the hippocampus and
cortical regions previously known to support detailed memory processing.
These findings represent a mechanism by which mild exercise, on par
with yoga and tai chi, may improve memory. Future studies should test
the long-term effects of regular mild exercise on age-related memory
loss.
Abstract
Physical
exercise has beneficial effects on neurocognitive function, including
hippocampus-dependent episodic memory. Exercise intensity level can be
assessed according to whether it induces a stress response; the most
effective exercise for improving hippocampal function remains unclear.
Our prior work using a special treadmill running model in animals has
shown that stress-free mild exercise increases hippocampal neuronal
activity and promotes adult neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus (DG) of
the hippocampus, improving spatial memory performance. However, the
rapid modification, from mild exercise, on hippocampal memory function
and the exact mechanisms for these changes, in particular the impact on
pattern separation acting in the DG and CA3 regions, are yet to be
elucidated. To this end, we adopted an acute-exercise design in humans,
coupled with high-resolution functional MRI techniques, capable of
resolving hippocampal subfields. A single 10-min bout of very
light-intensity exercise (30%