Cut down on this brain-shrinking activity

If you are like many Americans, your brain may be shrinking without your even knowing it. This is caused by a sedentary lifestyle that no longer promotes exercise and physical activity, both of which have a critical impact on the size of our brains.

Exercise promotes the release of hormones in the brain called nerve growth factor. These hormones are needed to keep our brains big and well-connected. Our bodies and DNA were designed for movement. Our ancestors traveled six to 15 miles a day, walking, running and carrying as they hunted and gathered food.

Today, however, medical problems and jobs that require us to sit most of the day have led to a significant decrease in the amount of physical activity we get. Without this necessary exercise, we lose strength, our muscles atrophy (shrink), and our joints become stiff. It also means that our brains do not receive the signals to create necessary hormones to stay big and healthy.

The best way to keep your brain big is to keep moving your body. For those with multiple sclerosis, other chronic autoimmune diseases, or a serious health problem, this can be a special challenge. However, you are not alone, and you should ask for a referral to a physical therapist who can design a personalized program for stretching and strengthening that will help keep your body strong and flexible.

Without some type of daily activity you are at an increased risk for a steady decline in how far you can walk. Even if you are healthy, I encourage you to begin a daily program of stretching and moving your body to maintain brain health. When we do less and less physical activity, not only do our muscles shrink, but so do our brains and spinal cords. Exercise will make all the difference in keeping your brain from shrinking.

The Wahls Protocol has more information on brain health and physical activity, as does the Community Resources page at terrywahls.com and my Facebook page, The Wahls Foundation.

Dr. Terry Wahls

By Dr. Terry Wahls

Dr. Terry Wahls is a clinical professor of medicine at the University of Iowa where she teaches internal medicine residents and sees patients in a traumatic brain injury clinic and a therapeutic lifestyle clinic for those with complex chronic disease. In addition, she conducts clinical trials testing the efficacy of diet and lifestyle to treat chronic disease. She is also a patient with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis, which confined her to a tilt-recline wheelchair for four years. Dr. Wahls restored her health using diet and lifestyle interventions and now pedals her bike to work each day. She is the author of The Wahls Protocol: How I Beat Progressive MS Using Paleo Principles and Functional Medicine and the paperback, The Wahls Protocol: A Radical New Way to Treat All Chronic Autoimmune Conditions Using Paleo Principles, and teaches the public and medical community about the healing power of intensive nutrition.  
 
You can learn more about her work from her website: www.terrywahls.com. She is conducting clinical trials testing the effect of nutrition and lifestyle interventions on MS. She is also committed to teaching the public and medical community about the healing power of the Paleo diet and therapeutic lifestyle changes to restore health and vitality to our citizens. Follow her on Facebook and Twitter at @TerryWahls. You can learn more about her research at here.

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