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Exercise Makes You Stress Resistant
Researchers at Princeton University recently made a remarkable
discovery about the brains of rats that exercise. Some of their
neurons respond differently to stress than the neurons of slothful
rats. Scientists have known for some time that exercise stimulates
the creation of new brain cells (neurons) but not how, precisely,
these neurons might be functionally different from other brain
cells.
In the experiment, preliminary results of which
were presented last month at the annual meeting of the Society
for Neuroscience in Chicago, scientists allowed one group of rats
to run. Another set of rodents were not allowed to exercise. Then
all of the rats swam in cold water, which they dont like
to do. Afterward, the scientists examined the animals brains.
They found that the stress of the swimming activated neurons in
all of the animals brains. (The researchers could tell which
neurons were activated because the cells expressed specific genes
in response to the stress.) But the youngest brain cells in the
running rats, the cells that the scientists assumed were created
by running, were less likely to express the genes. They generally
remained quiet. The cells born from running, the researchers
concluded, appeared to have been specifically buffered from
exposure to a stressful experience. The rats had created,
through running, a brain that seemed biochemically, molecularly,
calm.
For years, both in popular imagination and in scientific circles,
it has been a given that exercise enhances mood. But how exercise,
a physiological activity, might directly affect mood and anxiety,
psychological states, was unclear. Now, thanks in no small part
to improved research techniques and a growing understanding of
the biochemistry and the genetics of thought itself, scientists
are beginning to tease out how exercise remodels the brain, making
it more stress-resistant. In work undertaken at the University
of Colorado, Boulder, for instance, scientists have examined the
role of serotonin, a neurotransmitter often considered to be the
happy brain chemical. That simplistic view of serotonin
has been undermined by other researchers, and the University of
Colorado work further dilutes the idea. In those experiments,
rats taught to feel helpless and anxious (by being exposed to
a laboratory stressor) showed increased serotonin activity in
their brains. But rats that had run for several weeks before being
stressed showed less serotonin activity and were less anxious
and helpless despite the stress.
Other researchers have looked at how exercise alters the activity
of dopamine, another neurotransmitter in the brain, while still
others have concentrated on the antioxidant powers of moderate
exercise. Anxiety in rodents and people has been linked with excessive
oxidative stress, which can lead to cell death, including in the
brain. Moderate exercise, though, appears to dampen the effects
of oxidative stress. In an experiment reported at the Society
for Neuroscience meeting, rats whose oxidative-stress levels had
been artificially increased with injections of certain chemicals
were extremely anxious when faced with unfamiliar terrain during
lab testing. But rats that had exercised, even if they had received
the oxidizing chemical, were relatively nonchalant under stress.
When placed in the unfamiliar space, they didnt run for
dark corners and hide, like the unexercised rats. They insouciantly
explored.
It looks more and more like the positive stress of exercise
prepares cells and structures and pathways within the brain so
that theyre more equipped to handle stress in other forms,
says Michael Hopkins, a graduate student affiliated with the Neurobiology
of Learning and Memory Laboratory at Dartmouth, who has been studying
how exercise differently affects thinking and emotion. Its
pretty amazing, really, that you can get this translation from
the realm of purely physical stresses to the realm of psychological
stressors.
The stress-reducing changes wrought by exercise on the brain
dont happen overnight, however, as virtually every researcher
agrees. In the University of Colorado experiments, for instance,
rats that ran for only three weeks did not show much reduction
in stress-induced anxiety, but those that ran for at least six
weeks did. Something happened between three and six weeks,
says Benjamin Greenwood, Ph.D., a research associate in the Department
of Integrative Physiology at the University of Colorado, who helped
conduct the experiments. Its not clear how that translates
into an exercise prescription for humans. We may require more
weeks of working out, or maybe less. And no one has yet studied
how intense the exercise needs to be. But the lesson is dont
quit, Greenwood says. Keep running or cycling or swimming.
(Animal experiments have focused exclusively on aerobic, endurance-type
activities.) You may not feel a magical reduction of stress after
your first jog, if you havent been exercising. But the molecular,
biochemical changes will begin, Greenwood says, and eventually
they become, he says, profound.
Reference
Source 133
November 18, 2009
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