If sport is good for the
body, it also seems to be good for the brain. By evaluating memory performance following a
sport session, neuroscientists from the University of Geneva (UNIGE)
demonstrate that an intensive physical exercise session, as short as 15 minutes
on a bicycle, improves memory, including the acquisition of new motor skills. How? Through
the action of “Endocanabinoids”, molecules known to increase synaptic
plasticity. This study, to be read in
the journal “Scientific Reports”, highlights the virtues of sport for both
health and education. School programmes
and strategies aimed at reducing the effects of neurodegeneration on memory
could indeed benefit from it.
Very often, right after a
sporting exercise, especially endurance such as running or cycling, one feels
physical and psychological well-being. This feeling is due to endocannabinoids, small
molecules produced by the body during physical exertion. "They circulate in the blood and easily
cross the blood-brain barrier. They then
bind to specialise cellular receptors and trigger this feeling of euphoria. In addition, these same molecules bind to
receptors in the hippocampus, the main brain structure for memory
processing," says Kinga Igloi, lecturer in the laboratory of Professor
Sophie Schwartz, at UNIGE Faculty of Medicine's Department of Basic
Neurosciences, who led this work. "But
what is the link between sport and memory? This is what we wanted to understand,"
she continues.
Intense Effort Is More Effective
To test the effect of
sport on motor learning, scientists asked a group of 15 young and healthy men,
who were not athletes, to take a memory test under three conditions of physical
exercise:
·
after 30
minutes of moderate cycling
·
after 15
minutes of intensive cycling (defined as 80% of their maximum heart rate)
·
after a period
of rest.
"The exercise was as
follows: a screen showed four points placed next to each other. Each time one of the dots briefly changed into
a star, the participant had to press the corresponding button as quickly as
possible," explains Blanca Marin Bosch, researcher in the same laboratory.
"It followed a predefined and
repeated sequence in order to precisely evaluate how movements were learnt. This is very similar to what we do when, for
example, we learn to type on a keyboard as quickly as possible. After an intensive sports session, the
performance was much better."
In addition to the results
of the memory tests, the scientists observed changes in the activation of brain
structures with functional MRI and performed blood tests to measure
endocannabinoid levels. The different
analyses concur: the faster individuals are, the more they activate their
hippocampus (the brain area of memory) and the caudate nucleus (a brain
structure involved in motor processes). Moreover,
their endocannabinoid levels follow the same curve: the higher the level after
intense physical effort, the more the brain is activated and the better the
brain's performance. "These molecules are involved in synaptic plasticity,
i.e. the way in which neurons are connected to each other, and thus may act on
long-term potentiation, the mechanism for optimal consolidation of
memory," says Blanca Marin Bosch.
In a previous study, the
research team had already shown the positive effect of sport on another type of
memory, “associative memory”. However,
contrary to what is shown here, they had observed that a sport session of
moderate intensity produced better results. It therefore shows that, as not all forms of
memory use the same brain mechanisms, not all sports intensities have the same
effects. It should be noted that in all
cases, physical exercise improves memory more than inaction.
By providing precise
neuroscientific data, these studies make it possible to envisage new strategies
for improving or preserving memory. "Sports activity can be an easy to
implement, minimally invasive and inexpensive intervention. For example, would it be useful to schedule a
sports activity at the end of a school morning to consolidate memory and
improve learning?", Kinga Igloi wonders, who, with her colleagues at
Sophie Schwartz's laboratory, aims to achieve such practical objectives.
Neuroscientists are
currently pursuing their work by studying memory disorders, and in particular
by studying populations at high risk of developing Alzheimer's disease. "Some people as young as 25 years of age
may experience subtle memory deficits characterised by overactivation of the
hippocampus. We want to evaluate the
extent to which sports practice could help compensate for these early deficits
that are precursors to Alzheimer's disease.," conclude the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment