MEDITATION MUST SLOW THE AGE RELATED LOSS OF GRAY MATTER IN THE BRAIN
Since 1970, life
expectancy around the world has risen dramatically, with people living more
than 10 years longer. That's the good news.
The bad news is that
starting when people are in their mid-to-late-20s, the brain begins to wither
-- its volume and weight begin to decrease. As this occurs, the brain can begin
to lose some of its functional abilities.
So although people
might be living longer, the years they gain often come with increased risks for
mental illness and neurodegenerative disease. Fortunately, a new study shows
meditation could be one way to minimize those risks.
Building on their
earlier work that suggested people who meditate have less age-related atrophy
in the brain's white matter, a new study by UCLA researchers found that
meditation appeared to help preserve the brain's gray matter, the tissue that
contains neurons.
The scientists looked
specifically at the association between age and gray matter. They compared 50
people who had mediated for years and 50 who didn't. People in both groups
showed a loss of gray matter as they aged. But the researchers found among
those who meditated, the volume of gray matter did not decline as much as it
did among those who didn't.
The article appears in
the current online edition of the journal Frontiers in Psychology.
Dr. Florian Kurth, a
co-author of the study and postdoctoral fellow at the UCLA Brain Mapping
Center, said the researchers were surprised by the magnitude of the difference.
"We expected
rather small and distinct effects located in some of the regions that had
previously been associated with meditating," he said. "Instead, what
we actually observed was a widespread effect of meditation that encompassed
regions throughout the entire brain."
As baby boomers have
aged and the elderly population has grown, the incidence of cognitive decline
and dementia has increased substantially as the brain ages.
"In that light,
it seems essential that longer life expectancies do not come at the cost of a
reduced quality of life," said Dr. Eileen Luders, first author and assistant
professor of neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
"While much research has focused on identifying factors that increase the
risk of mental illness and neurodegenerative decline, relatively less attention
has been turned to approaches aimed at enhancing cerebral health."
Each group in the
study was made up of 28 men and 22 women ranging in age from 24 to 77. Those
who meditated had been doing so for four to 46 years, with an average of 20
years.
The participants'
brains were scanned using high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging. Although
the researchers found a negative correlation between gray matter and age in
both groups of people -- suggesting a loss of brain tissue with increasing age
-- they also found that large parts of the gray matter in the brains of those
who meditated seemed to be better preserved, Kurth said.
The researchers
cautioned that they cannot draw a direct, causal connection between meditation
and preserving gray matter in the brain. Too many other factors may come into
play, including lifestyle choices, personality traits, and genetic brain
differences.
"Still, our
results are promising," Luders said. "Hopefully they will stimulate
other studies exploring the potential of meditation to better preserve our aging
brains and minds. Accumulating scientific evidence that meditation has
brain-altering capabilities might ultimately allow for an effective translation
from research to practice, not only in the framework of healthy aging but also
pathological aging."
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