Washington, June 30: Elderly people who are active show better cerebral health than those who are inactive, says the latest study.
Researchers led by Elizabeth Bullitt, neurosurgeon at the University of North Carolina (UNC) School of Medicine, used non-invasive magnetic resonance (MR) angiography to examine brain blood vessels in the elderly, aged 60 to 80 years.
The subjects were equally divided into two groups. The high activity group reported participating in an aerobic activity for a minimum of 180 minutes per week for the past 10 consecutive years.
The low activity group told investigators they had no history of regular exercise and currently spent less than 90 minutes a week in any physical activity. The researchers did not know into which group participants were placed.
Aerobically active subjects exhibited more small-diameter vessels with less twisting, than the less active group, exhibiting a vessel pattern similar to younger adults.
The authors identified significant differences in the left and right middle cerebral artery regions, which was confirmed by more than one statistical analysis.
The brain’s blood vessels naturally narrow and become more tortuous with advancing age, but the study showed the cerebral-vascular patterns of active patients appeared “younger” than those of relatively inactive subjects.
–IANS