05/08/2018 / By Jessica Dolores
You watch what you eat and make sure you get a good night’s sleep. You regularly step outdoors to get your daily dose of natural vitamin D from the sun. But on weekdays, you work an eight-hour job that requires you to stay tied to your desk practically the whole time.
According to a new study, this unhealthy lifestyle could offset most everything you’ve done to stay healthy. Researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) found that sitting too long, like smoking, carries the same risks. These include heart disease, diabetes, and even premature death.
In their quest to see if a sedentary lifestyle affects brain health, researchers gathered 35 people aged between 45 to 75. The research team asked them about their physical activities and the usual number of hours they spent sitting during the previous week. Each of the participants underwent a high-resolution MRI scan, which gave a detailed view of the medial temporal lobe (MTL) a part of the brain responsible for creating new memories.
The researchers discovered that sedentary behavior can significantly predict thinning of the MTL. They also found out that the harmful effects of sitting to brain health are irreversible. Not even high levels of physical activity can compensate for the damage that has been done.
Our present-day lifestyle, characterized by the prevalence of gadgets that make us sit down for longer periods of time, makes sedentary behavior part of our daily routine. If you can’t change this kind of lifestyle, what can do you to reduce its effects?
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So get up, leave that computer chair for a while and get going. Your body – and mind – will thank you for it.
Want other great reasons to get moving? Head on over to Slender.news for more articles on the benefits of physical exercise.
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Tagged Under: brain function, brisk walking, couch potato, employee health, exercise, fitness, moderate exercise, physical activity, physical exercise, prevention, running, sedentary behavior, sedentary lifestyle., sitting, standing up