Brain Resilience and Physical Exercise
By Michael Dabney

Animal studies have long suggested that aerobic exercise boosts cellular and molecular components of the brain and improves problem solving and other cognitive abilities. However, in what is believed to be the first human study to show that aerobic exercise actually slows the decline of brain density in white and gray matter areas of the brain as we age, Colcombe and colleagues (2003) are helping to establish a clinical link between exercise and brain resilience. Such findings have important implications for children and adolescent learners as well as aging adults.

The Colcombe study found that among older adults, aerobic exercise (activities such as walking, jogging, running in place and jumping jacks) helps preserve white and gray matter density in the brains frontal, temporal and parietal cortexesareas vital to higher-order thinking. (Gray matter consists of neurons and support cells that are important to learning and memory; white matter is the myelin sheath containing the nerve fibers that transmit signals throughout the brain). Density in gray and white matter areas tends to begin shrinking after age 30, with an average loss estimated at 15 percent of the cerebral cortex and 25 percent of the cerebral white matter from the age of 30 to the age of 90 (Columbe et al., 2003).

What does this mean to youngsters in your classroom? It could mean that the exercise regimens they begin today can help assure that their brains remain vital and healthy well into adulthood, research by Thompson and colleagues (2003) suggests. In a longitudinal study spanning 25 years, Thompson found that the attitudes we develop as children about exercise and the level of physical exercise we engage in as children are strong predictors of the levels of exercise we will engage in as adults.

Other research linking physical activity to brain function include:

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A study by Beurden and colleagues (2003) suggests that quality school physical education classes are ideal for improving childrens fundamental motor skills and enhancing overall health.

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Research by MacMahon (1990) documents that aerobic exercise reduces anxiety, tension and depression and contributes to increased self-esteem, even among adolescents with behavior problems.

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A study by Vermorel and associates (2003) found that children and adolescents gain the optimal mental and physical benefits from aerobic exercise when they follow a healthful diet regimen. On days when they have physical education class in the morning, the study recommends that students consume a hearty breakfast before leaving home to fuel the body and brain for the physical activity ahead. Following P. E. class, students should eat a carbohydrate-rich snack to enhance attention and memory for classroom work.

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Nader (2003) found that, although national health recommendations call for pre-adolescent children to have daily physical education classes that engage children in moderate to vigorous physical activity at least fifty percent of P. E. class time, many schools fall short of the mark. In a study of P. E. activity that involved more than 800 children at 684 elementary schools, Nader found that only 5.9 percent of the children had daily P. E. activity, with the majority of children receiving 2.1 P. E. classes per week (each class consisting of an average of 25 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise).

Action Steps

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Realize the important role that physical activity, particularly aerobic exercise, plays in brain function and brain vitality.

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Inquire about your schools physical education program. Is it providing proper time and schedules for moderate-to-vigorous exercise for students on a regular basis? If not, ask the school administration to investigate the matter.

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If your school does not have a formal physical education program, consider what you can do in your own class to assure that children get at least some aerobic activity during the day. Some suggestions: At the beginning of class each day, engage your students in a series of easy-to-do exercises for five minutes, such as jumping jacks, running in place or knee bends. These exercises are known to wake up the brain and prepare it for the task at hand.

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Encourage your students to participate regularly in physical activity outside of class, such as playing organized sports, and establish a personal exercise regimen of their own, such as jogging or power walking before and after school.

Beurden, E., Barnett, L. M., Zask, A., Dietrich, U. C., Brooks, L. O., & Beard, J. (2003). Can we skill and activate children through primary school physical education lessons? Move it, groove ituA collaborative health promotion intervention. Preventive Medicine, 36(4), 493501.

Colcombe, Stanley J., Erickson, Kirk I., Raz, Naftali; Webb, Andrew G., Cohen, Neal J., McAuley, Edward, & Kramer, Arthur F. (2003). Aerobic fitness reduces brain tissue loss in aging humans. Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences, 58A(2), 17680.

MacMahon, J. R. (1990, June). The psychological benefits of exercise and the treatment of delinquent adolescents. Sports Medicine, 9(6), 34451.

Nader, P. R. (2003). Frequency and intensity of activity of third-grade children in physical education. Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, 157(2), 18590.

Thompson, A. M., Humbert, M. L., Mirwold, R. L. (2003). A longitudinal study of the impact of childhood and adolescent physical activity experiences on adult physical activity perception and behaviors. Qualitative Health Research, 13(3), 35877.

Vermorel, M., Bitar, A., Vernet, J., Verdier, E., & Coudert, J. (2003). The extent to which breakfast covers the morning energy expenditure of adolescents with varying levels of physical activity. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 57(2), 3105.

This article appeared in The Learning Brain Newsletter, May 2003 at www.thelearningbrain.com

 

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