首页
登录
职称英语
Exercise to Protect Aging Bodies — and BrainsA)We all know
Exercise to Protect Aging Bodies — and BrainsA)We all know
游客
2023-07-07
33
管理
问题
Exercise to Protect Aging Bodies — and Brains
A)We all know that exercise is good for you. Staying physically active helps keep your heart healthy and your muscles strong, and in cancer patients it has even been shown to ward off relapse(复发). Now a series of independently conducted studies on the effects of exercise on healthy older adults, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, confirms that logging time at the gym not only helps maintain good health but may even prevent the attack of chronic diseases, such as heart disease, osteoarthritis and dementia.
B)In one surprising trial, researchers led by Dr Teresa Liu-Ambrose at the University of British Columbia randomly assigned 155 aging women to three separate groups and directly compared the cognitive effects of two types of exercise: resistance training, done once or twice weekly, in which participants worked out with free weights and weight machines and did squats and lunges, versus toning and balance exercises, which participants did twice a week.
C)By the end of the yearlong study, the women who weight-trained saw an improvement in their performance on cognitive tests of memory and learning as well as in executive functions such as decision-making and conflict resolution — women who trained once a week improved their scores in executive functioning by 12.6% — while those who did balance and toning exercises showed no such improvement. The muscle-strengthening exercise also helped the volunteers, ages 65 to 75, boost their walking speed, a commonly used indicator of overall health status in the elderly, as faster pace has been linked with lower mortality.
D)The Canadian researchers’ findings were somewhat unexpected, given that previous studies on the issue have typically focused on aerobic exercise, which experts believe enhances cognitive function by promoting blood flow to the brain. Liu-Ambrose says her team speculated that anaerobic weight training would have a similar effect for other reasons. First, a resistance-training regimen requires a considerable amount of learning, especially for elderly people who may not be accustomed to the equipment. To learn how to use dumbbells, a leg press or a latissimus pull-down machine correctly, for example, the volunteers were required to focus on the task at hand, master new techniques and retain new information about proper and safe use of equipment. Previous studies have shown that such learning can help older adults maintain mental acuity.
E)The women also had to remember their weight settings and adjustments to the seats and keep track of the number of repetitions they completed, says Liu-Ambrose. "There is a lot more learning involved that may not occur if you take up a walking program," she says, noting that it took the volunteers a good two months to get comfortable with the equipment and the training regimen. In addition, Liu-Ambrose says, other studies have found that people who weight-train show an increase in blood levels of a growth factor that is important for maintaining skeletal mass. This factor, it turns out, also promotes nerve growth, which could be another way that resistance training boosts mental function.
F)In a second brain-function study, published in the same journal, scientists in Germany found that increased physical activity was associated with a lower incidence of dementia. In this study, researchers recruited 3,485 elderly residents in Bavaria and asked them about their physical activity. None of the participants had dementia at the start of the analysis, but after two years of follow-up, researchers found that those who exercised at least three times a week were half as likely to have developed dementia, compared with the people who reported no physical activity. Based on his results, says lead author Dr Thorleif Etgen, a professor of psychiatry and psychotherapy at Munchen University, "it doesn’t make a big difference if you have moderate or high physical activity. The important message is that you do any activity. And even if you start late in life, at 60 or 70, there is a benefit, for it’s never too late to start exercising."
G)The key words are "moderate or high", according to another study that was published in the Archives of Internal Medicine. Dr Qi Sun, a researcher at Harvard School of Public Health, analyzed 13,000 women participating in the Nurses’ Health Study and found that when it came to exercise, more was better. Compared with women who jogged for 20 minutes a week, those who jogged three hours a week or walked briskly for five hours a week were 76% more likely to age successfully, free of chronic illnesses such as cancer and heart disease, as well as mental and physical impairment. Sun’s group found that this benefit occurred across all weight divisions, meaning that even among those who were overweight or obese, women who exercised improved their odds of aging without chronic disease. The effects may apply across different age groups as well; the women were at least 60 years old by the time they enrolled in the study, and while Sun was not able to determine how long they had been exercising prior to that, the results suggest that the health benefits are not limited to the young.
H)That was the same message of the final exercise paper in the journal, by researchers at University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany. In this trial, a group of 246 elderly women were randomly assigned to an 18-month exercise regimen or wellness program. The women participating in the four-times-weekly exercise sessions, which involved aerobics and balance and muscle training, improved their bone mineral density by nearly 2%. The women in the wellness group, which focused on walking, muscle relaxation and breathing skills, had a 0.33% increase in bone mineral density over the same time period.
I)Despite the positive evidence, however, not all researchers are ready to suggest that exercise is a sure-fire prescription against mental decline or chronic disease in healthy people. To make that claim, a large, longer-term, controlled trial would be needed, in which participants are randomly assigned to exercise or not, and are then followed for the development of chronic conditions such as cancer, heart disease or dementia. Still, says Dr Marco Pahor, director of the Institute on Aging at the University of Florida and author of a commentary on the studies appearing in the journal, "if you pool all the evidence together, the benefits of exercise seem promising." [br] The result of Liu-Ambrose and his partners’ research about the cognitive effects of two kinds of exercise on aging women shows that resistance training is good for promoting cognitive function
选项
答案
C
解析
根据题目中的Liu—Ambrose和cognitive effects of two kinds of exercise on aging women将本题出处定位于C)段。该段主要介绍上段提到的两种锻炼:resistance training和toningand balance exercises的结果,研究者惊奇地发现,在记忆力、学习能力以及执行能力(考查决策或解决冲突等的能力)的认知能力测试中,参加重量训练的女性的成绩有所提高——其中每周训练一次的那些女性其执行能力测试成绩提高了12.6%——而调理
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/2816496.html
相关试题推荐
BeautyandBodyImageintheMediaA)Imagesoffemalebodiesare
BeautyandBodyImageintheMediaA)Imagesoffemalebodiesare
BeautyandBodyImageintheMediaA)Imagesoffemalebodiesare
BeautyandBodyImageintheMediaA)Imagesoffemalebodiesare
ProtectYourPrivacyWhenJob-huntingOnlineA)Identitytheft
ProtectYourPrivacyWhenJob-huntingOnlineA)Identitytheft
ProtectYourPrivacyWhenJob-huntingOnlineA)Identitytheft
ProtectYourPrivacyWhenJob-huntingOnlineA)Identitytheft
ProtectYourPrivacyWhenJob-huntingOnlineA)Identitytheft
ProtectYourPrivacyWhenJob-huntingOnlineA)Identitytheft
随机试题
Let’stry(do)______theworksomeotherway.doing本题测试的是动词短语固定搭配用法。动词try后面可跟两种不
【说明】请以李军的名义写一则寻物启事。【时间】3月12日【内容】今天中午在餐厅吃饭时,将书包忘在那里。书包为棕色,里面有一本课本、一本笔记本和一个MP
甲公司在沙发上注册了“向下”商标。下列行为中,属于侵犯商标专用权的是()。A
大众教育
下列判断哪些是关系判断()。A.刘秀和阴丽华是夫妻。 B.泰山在黄河之南。
关于月经周期的调节,下列哪项是不正确的A.月经周期中间血雌激素高峰之后,出现陡峰
长期过量摄入脂溶性维生素时( )。A.以原形从尿中排出 B.经代谢分解后
进食油腻食物后右上腹剧痛,向右肩放射,常见于()A.急性胃炎 B.胃穿孔
()广泛存在于商业银行业务和管理的各个领域,具有普遍性,只会给银行带来成本和
A.盐酸 B.组胺 C.糖 D.促胃液素 E.乙酰胆碱刺激促胰液素分泌最
最新回复
(
0
)