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Active
Kids May Be Less
Prone to Depression
Studies have shown that exercise may
battle depression in adults, and now new evidence suggests the
same may be true for children.
In a study of nearly 4,600 middle-schoolers
followed for two years, researchers found that the more active
children were, the less likely they were to suffer symptoms of
depression.
It's unclear whether this represents
a cause-and-effect relationship, or whether feelings of depression
caused some kids to become less active. But there is reason to
believe that exercise helps thwart depression, according to one
of the study's authors, Dr. Rod K. Dishman of the University of
Georgia in Athens.
Along with studies suggesting active
adults have a lower risk of developing depression down the road,
there is evidence that exercise aids in the treatment of adult
depression, Dishman stated.
In addition, he explained, exercise
seems to affect some key nervous system chemicals-norepinephrine
and serotonin-that are targets of antidepressant drugs, as well
as brain neurotrophins, which help protect nerve cells from injury
and transmit nerve signals in brain regions related to mood.
Dishman and his colleagues report
their findings in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine.
The study included 4,594 Minnesota
seventh-graders who answered questions on their activity levels
and other habits such as smoking and drinking. They also took
a standard screening test for depression symptoms. The measures
were repeated at the end of seventh grade and again at the end
of eighth grade.
The researchers were interested
in how changes in exercise habits over the two years were related
to changes in depression scores. They found that overall, when
activity levels increased, depression symptoms decreased, and
when exercise levels declined, depression scores went up.
Dishman said that exercise could
plausibly help prevent depression in the first place, as well
as treat it. In their report, he and his colleagues point to recent
clinical trials in which exercise, antidepressants and psychological
therapy all had similar benefits for adults with depression-although,
Dishman noted, the benefits of exercise generally took longer
to emerge compared with drug treatment.
With adolescents, the researchers
write, the safety of drug treatment is not yet certain, and since
psychological therapy is not always effective, it will be important
to keep studying potential "low-risk" alternatives, such as physical
activity.
SOURCE: Psychosomatic Medicine,
May/June 2004.
Reference
Source 89
July
12, 2004
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