Neurobiology of exercise
Autor: | Charles H. Hillman, Rod K. Dishman, Timothy H. Moran, Barry E. Levin, Arthur F. Kramer, Hans-Rudolf Berthoud, Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, Monika Fleshner, Charles E. Wade, Jacqueline D. Van Hoomissen, Amelia A. Russo-Neustadt, Benjamin N. Greenwood, Simon C. Gandevia, John D. Salamone, Michael J. Zigmond, V. Reggie Edgerton, Frank W. Booth, Carl W. Cotman, David A. York |
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Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Central Nervous System
medicine.medical_specialty Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Central nervous system Medicine (miscellaneous) Physical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation Neuroprotection Endocrinology Cognition Neurochemical Physical medicine and rehabilitation Stress Physiological Neurotrophic factors Neuroplasticity medicine Humans Dementia Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Exercise Spinal cord injury Behavior Nutrition and Dietetics Neuronal Plasticity biology business.industry medicine.disease Adaptation Physiological medicine.anatomical_structure biology.protein Energy Metabolism Motor learning business Neuroscience Neurotrophin |
Zdroj: | Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports. 16:470-470 |
ISSN: | 1600-0838 0905-7188 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1600-0838.2006.00610_1.x |
Popis: | Voluntary physical activity and exercise training can favorably influence brain plasticity by facilitating neurogenerative, neuroadaptive, and neuroprotective processes. At least some of the processes are mediated by neurotrophic factors. Motor skill training and regular exercise enhance executive functions of cognition and some types of learning, including motor learning in the spinal cord. These adaptations in the central nervous system have implications for the prevention and treatment of obesity, cancer, depression, the decline in cognition associated with aging, and neurological disorders such as Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's dementia, ischemic stroke, and head and spinal cord injury. Chronic voluntary physical activity also attenuates neural responses to stress in brain circuits responsible for regulating peripheral sympathetic activity, suggesting constraint on sympathetic responses to stress that could plausibly contribute to reductions in clinical disorders such as hypertension, heart failure, oxidative stress, and suppression of immunity. Mechanisms explaining these adaptations are not as yet known, but metabolic and neurochemical pathways among skeletal muscle, the spinal cord, and the brain offer plausible, testable mechanisms that might help explain effects of physical activity and exercise on the central nervous system. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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