Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Physical Cognitive Exercise Are Similarly Effective DNA Protectors Antioxidant Boosters in Elderly Men Women
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Brain builders and muscle builders are similarly effective DNA protectors in the elderly. |
DNA damage is obviously important, maintaining optimal lean mass levels is important, too

Tri- or Multi-Set Training for Body Recomp.?
Alternating Squat & Blood Pressure - Productive?
Pre-Exhaustion Exhausts Your Growth Potential
Full ROM ? Full Gains - Form Counts!
Battle the Rope to Get Ripped & Strong
Study Indicates Cut the Volume Make the Gains!
In the recent Austrian study, the subjects had been randomized to three groups. The previously described cognitive training group, which also served as a "control", as well as two resistance training groups.
Tri- or Multi-Set Training for Body Recomp.?

Alternating Squat & Blood Pressure - Productive?

Pre-Exhaustion Exhausts Your Growth Potential

Full ROM ? Full Gains - Form Counts!

Battle the Rope to Get Ripped & Strong

Study Indicates Cut the Volume Make the Gains!
"The RT groups (RT and RTS) performed two sessions of RT per week, supervised by a sport scientist, conducted on two non-consecutive days. Training attendance was recorded every session. The only equipment used was exercise bands and a chair. [...] The main part consisted of 10 exercises for the main muscle groups (legs, back, abdomen, chest, shoulder and arms). One training session started with 10 min of warm-up, continued with 3040 min of strength training and ended with a 10-min cool-down. To keep the training stimulus high enough, the exercise program was adjusted to the participants individual needs, by either adapting the resistance of the elastic band (shorter or stronger band) or by modifying the exercise, by means of performing a more diffiult version. In the initial phase (4 weeks) one set of 15 repetitions was performed in order to learn the correct form of each exercise. From the fifth week on, the intensity and volume were progressively increased from two sets of light exercises to two sets of heavy resistance. If the participants could easily perform two sets of 15 repetitions they were told either to take more resistance or to perform a more difficult version of the exercise" (Franzke. 2014).In contrast to the RT group, which did "nothing", but the previously described resistance training regimen, the subjects in the RTS group consumed a multi-ingredient supplement every morning, as well as directly after each training session. Said supplement consisted of 20.7g protein [56 energy (En) %, 19.7g whey protein, 3 g leucine, >10 g essential amino acids], 9.3 g carbohydrates (25 En%, 0.8 BE); 3.0 g fat (18 En%), 1.2 g roughage (2 En%), 800 IU (20 ?g) of vitamin D, 250 mg calcium, vitamins C, E, B6 and B12, folic acid and magnesium (one portion FortiFit, Nutricia with a total energy content per drink of only 150 kcal).
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Figure 1: Changes in parameters of DNA damage and antioxidant enzyme expression (Franzke. 2014). |
We should keep in mind, though, that (a) non-significant benefits were visible for the formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (FPG) and the expression of superoxide dismutase and that (b) the actual benefits of protein supplements would have become visible only if the scientists had accessed the changes in body composition, as well.
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Maximal protein synthesis - How much protein do the elderly need? Find out in a previous SV article. |
All Christmas jokes aside, the study at hand simply confirms what the proverb "a rolling stone gathers no moss" implies. Exercise, no matter whether its cognitive or physical exercise, protects aging men and women from pro-cancerous DNA damage and ensures that can maintain "a sound mind in a sane body" | Comment on Facebook!
- Franzke, B. et al. "The impact of six months strength training, nutritional supplementation or cognitive training on DNA damage in institutionalised elderly." Mutagenesis (2015):147153.
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Wake Up Light as Natural Ergogenic Dawn Simulation Increases Early Morning Physical Cognitive Performance
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What could be better than starting your day with the first rays of the sun? Doing this with a person you love, I suppose. |
If you listened to the show, you may also remember that Carl mentioned that it would be great to have a light-based alarm clock - something like a light therapy lamp that increases its intensity gradually at a given time and will thus wake you up from a deep slumber.
You can learn more about sleep and the circadian rhythm at the SuppVersity

Sunlight, Bluelight, Backlight and Your Clock
Sunlight a La Carte: "Hack" Your Rhythm
Fasting (Re-)Sets the Peripheral Clock
Vitamin A & Caffeine Set the Clock

Pre-Workout Supps Could Ruin Your Sleep
This is at least what a recent study from the University College London would suggest. For the corresponding experiment, the researchers from the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health recruited 8 young adults (four males; four females) with a mean age of 24 ± 9 years who had not been involved in nocturnal shift work or undertaken transmeridian travel during the past 30 days (thats important to ensure that their circadian rhythm was not messed up in the first place).
Dawn Simulation? How did that work? Two dawn simulation devices (Lumie Bodyclock Active 250) were placed at either side of the participants bed at a distance of 30 cm to ensure they were exposed to the light. thirty minutes prior to waking, dawn simulation was initiated, starting at 0.001 lux and rising to 300 lux following a sigmoidal illumination ramp. Accuracy was confirmed by measurement of illuminance with a digital photometer.
The trials themselves were ordered in a counterbalanced fashion and were separated by 59 days. In the two days leading up to the tests, the participants were asked to sleep the exact times in their own homes that they would in the laboratory. to monitor compliance wrist accelerometers were issued.In view of the fact that I already gave away the results, its probably not really surprising that the data in Figure 1 confirms that being waken up by artificial sunlight had significant beneficial effects on the cognitive and physical performance of the subjects.Did you know that previous studies support the use of dawn simulations to tread seasonal effective disorder, where it was on top of that associated with lower remission rates than regular light therapy (Avery. 1993 & 2001). In addition, dawn simulations have been shown to have beneficial effects on the necessary and natural and healthy (Clow. 2010) early morning increase in cortisol (Thorn. 2004)?"The experimental trials were identical with the exception of the 30 min prior to waking. During this time par ticipants either slept normally in complete darkness, the control condition (c), or were exposed to dawn simulation (DS).
Each nights sleep ended with an audible alarm. At the same moment, a researcher entered the room to ensure that the participant was awake. Participants were then allowed to attend the bathroom if required.
After waking, a 75 min testing protocol commenced which consisted of: three bouts of cognitive assessment, one physical performance test and monitoring of physiological and subjective variables." (Thompson. 2014)
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Figure 1: Changes in number of total additions and reaction time in cognitive tests (Thompson. 2014) |
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The Philips Wake Up Light, I mentioned on the air has a similar 300lux daylight lamp as the device used in the study at hand. |
Whether this or the addition of a "post-wake-up" session in front of a light therapy lamp, as the one I use, provides additional benefits, would yet have to be verified in a controlled trial.
- Avery, David H., et al. "Dawn simulation treatment of winter depression: a controlled study." American Journal of Psychiatry 150 (1993): 113-113.
- Avery, David H., et al. "Dawn simulation and bright light in the treatment of SAD: a controlled study." Biological psychiatry 50.3 (2001): 205-216.
- Clow, Angela, et al. "The cortisol awakening response: more than a measure of HPA axis function." Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 35.1 (2010): 97-103.
- Thompson, Andrew, et al. "Effects of dawn simulation on markers of sleep inertia and post-waking performance in humans." European journal of applied physiology (2014): 1-8.
- Thorn, Lisa, et al. "The effect of dawn simulation on the cortisol response to awakening in healthy participants." Psychoneuroendocrinology 29.7 (2004): 925-930.
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