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Regular and appropriate physical exercise |
We all know that regular and appropriate physical exercise
is good for us. It helps control body weight and reduces the risk of diabetes,
obesity and heart disease.
What may come as more of a surprise is that exercising in
early childhood can also be beneficial to future mental health by promoting the
proper development of the brain through the establishment of vigorous and
divers communities of bacteria in the digestive system.
Shortly after birth, the intestines of infants are
colonised by trillions of microbes which aid in the digestion of food as well
as a number of other vital bodily functions. Having the right mix and quantity
of these bacteria in the gut turns out to be crucial to the growth of the
metabolic, immune and neural systems.
Scientists have discovered that the microbial communities
in our stomachs are particularly “plastic” or amenable to change at a young
age. Because they are less malleable and adaptive in adulthood, what happens to
them in the early developmental stages of a person’s life can have long-lasting
effects.
In a news paper, published in the medical journal
Immunology and Cell Biology in December, two US researchers argue that
“exercise during this developmentally receptive time” promotes “optimal brain
and metabolic function across the lifespan” by stimulating the growth and
diversification of beneficial microbes in the digestive tract.
Studies of juvenile rats
According to the paper’s co-author Monika Fleshner, a
professor in the Department of Integrative Physiology at the University ofColorado in Boulder, “the ability of a young microbiota to robustly respond to
environmental stimuli, such as diet and exercise, is likely the primary reason
that early life exercise, compared to adult exercise, produces more profound
alterations in the gut microbiota”.
The results published in the paper are based on studies of
juvenile rats, which show that those individuals who exercised voluntarily on a
daily basis developed healthier microbial gut communities with greater numbers
of beneficial species of bacteria than their more sedentary counterparts, as
well as adult rats, even when the latter exercised regularly.
Further studies are necessary to
determine at exactly which age the intestinal bacteria are most amenable to
beneficial changes from physical activity and exercise, but the researchers
believe that it’s a case of “the earlier, the better”.
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