Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Yoga boosts brain power in the elderly

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Aug, 2014 07:53 AM
  • Yoga boosts brain power in the elderly
Practicing hatha yoga three times a week can improve sedentary adults' performance on cognitive tasks that are relevant to everyday life, a promising study indicates.
 
The study involved 108 adults between ages 55 and 79 years; 61 of them attended hatha yoga classes.
 
The others met for the same number and length of sessions and engaged in stretching and toning exercises instead of yoga.
 
At the end of the eight weeks, the yoga group was speedier and more accurate on tests of information recall, mental flexibility and task-switching than it had been before the intervention.
 
The stretching-and-toning group saw no significant change in cognitive performance over time.
 
“It is possible that this focus on one's body, mind and breath during yoga practice may have generalised to situations outside of the yoga classes, resulting in an improved ability to sustain attention,” said Neha Gothe, a professor at Wayne State University.
 
Hatha yoga is an ancient spiritual practice that involves meditation and focused breathing while an individual moves through a series of stylised postures.
 
Participants in the yoga intervention group showed significant improvements in working memory capacity that involves continually updating and manipulating information
 
They were also able to perform the task at hand quickly and accurately, without getting distracted.
 
“These mental functions are relevant to our everyday functioning, as we multitask and plan our day-to-day activities,” added co-author professor Edward McAuley from University of Illinois.
 
According to Gothe, yoga has an immediate quieting effect on the sympathetic nervous system and on the body's response to stress.
 
Since we know that stress and anxiety can affect cognitive performance, “the eight-week yoga intervention may have boosted participants' performance by reducing their stress", she noted.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?

Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?
According to an alarming study by University of Exeter, tiny plastic particles polluting our seas are entering the bodies of marine creatures through their gills....

Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?

Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning
Cinnamon can not only tickle your taste buds, the ancient cooking spice is also an effective anti-bacterial agent and can help prevent some of the most serious food-borne...

Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

Probiotics help reduce fat in liver

Probiotics help reduce fat in liver
For people suffering from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, eating probiotics for a month can help diminish the accumulation of fat in the liver...

Probiotics help reduce fat in liver

Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite

Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite
You may soon look at cat poop in a different light as it may hold the key to cancer cure.

Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite

Gene that mediates ageing identified

Gene that mediates ageing identified
In what could point towards the possibility of one day using therapeutics to combat ageing, researchers have found in animal models that a single gene plays a surprising role in ageing that can be detected early in development.

Gene that mediates ageing identified

Starvation effects pass on to next 3 generations

Starvation effects pass on to next 3 generations
Starvation may affect the health of at least the next three generations, says a study.

Starvation effects pass on to next 3 generations