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Health See other Health Articles Title: The 6 Secrets to Keeping Your Brain Healthy The 6 Secrets to Keeping Your Brain Healthy Because sleep deprivation, beer, and stress aren't doing you any favors. By Sarah Rense Science just gave us another reason to take physical exercise seriously. Great. A new study published in The Journal of the American Geriatrics Society found that weight training twice a week could help to preserve your most important assetyour brain. Participants who trained with weights twice a week showed significantly less brain deterioration than participants who did less or no weight training, reports The New York Times. (For the record, all the participants were women between the ages of 65 and 75, so take this for what you will.) Light weight training seemed to keep the lesions that eat away at the good stuff in your brain at bay, though exactly why is not yet known. This research is promising. Breeze into the gym twice a week and pound out a few reps, no problem. But it's also part of an ever-growing list of tricks that supposedly help your brain stay at peak condition. To help you think about your brain (consider that for a moment), here are five more things to try that don't involve weights and a sweaty gym mat. Apply as necessary. Red Wine Ah yes. A hotly debated topic that makes headlines every time a new study is published. The grapes in red wine contain resveratrol, which boosts blood flow to the brain, so a glass a day supposedly reduces the risk of Alzheimer's and memory loss. And it certainly wouldn't hurt you to try. But moderation is key, and here, scientists err on the side of caution: More than one glass a day could have negative effects on the brain. So keep it classy. Drugs The pharmaceutical kind. Neuro-enhancing drugs are popped by students and surgeons alike, and they are intended to jack up brain power in the short termsimilar to draining a pot of coffee before tackling a particularly arduous report. Modafinil is perhaps the most widely-used smart drug, and studies have yet to find serious long-term side effects. Plus, according to the Food and Drug Administration, it is considered far less addictive than Adderall. Power on. Keep your stress in check Seems obvious, but stress begets stress, and reminding a stressed individual to take it down a notch is less than helpful. But research shows stress does physically wage war on your brain cells and the part of your brain that houses memories, so if you value your oldest and most precious recollections, try setting more realistic expectations and pursue a healthy (or healthier) work/life balance. Brain food So dubbed for a reason. The list of memory-boosting foods is long, ranging from dark green leafy vegetables (yes, kale) to whole grains. The best brain food seems to be fish, and a study found that eating cold water catchessalmon, tuna, and codonce a week could slow cognitive decline by 10 percent per year. That's as good as three or four extra years, and all for a few bites of spicy tuna roll. Meditation In the long termand we're talking at least 20 yearsmeditating can better preserve the brain against the wear and tear of aging. If you're not quite ready to dedicate years to empty, transformational thought, studies also show that just a few weeks of the practice can improve focus and memory. Poster Comment: I don't think I've ever engaged in meditation, but sometimes, when I worked the concerts, I would think about how I was going to clean your clock. LOL Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
Anybody who mulls things through in quiet or solitude is, I suspect getting their dose -- e.g. when driving any distance or ling in bed before or after sleep. Surprised to see tuna on the food list -- it's been condemned as too polluted since way before Fukushima.
all mammals need sleep, which is why they like to cuddle. They kill good trees to put out bad newspapers. - James G. Watt
Do you feel culturally enriched? Me neither :) They kill good trees to put out bad newspapers. - James G. Watt
By #1??
Weights should be compared with other forms of exercise like cycling, skiing, things that aren't too routine and challenge the mind at least a bit.
I haven't eaten tuna in a long time. When I can find it, I eat salmon, since it is rich in Omega 3 oils, which are beneficial to brain health. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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