By [http://EzineArticles.com/expert/Carol_Chuang/545843]Carol
Chuang
The human brain is an extremely complex organ. Despite
rapid scientific progress, the knowledge about how the brain works in still
evolving.
The brain contains about 100 billion neurons, which are
highly specialized nerve cells responsible for communicating information
throughout the body. For each neuron, there are roughly anywhere from 1,000 to
10,000 synapses. A synapse is the connection between neurons that permits a
neuron to pass an electrical or chemical signal to another neuron. Hormones and
neurotransmitters are examples of chemical signals.
The old adage of humans only using 10% of our brain is
not true. Every part of the brain has a known function. Humans continue to make
new neurons throughout life in response to mental activity. When you learn
something new, your brain undergoes physical changes. The brain keeps growing
in the frontal and temporal lobes well into middle-age, which can be associated
with better emotional development and wisdom.
The brain is, in fact, very much like a muscle which can
be "bulked up" through exercise. Hence, it is possible to stimulate
and challenge your brain as you get older to promote its continued growth. This
means that the opposite also holds true - drug use, poor nutrition, or other
assaults on your brain can interfere with its development and health. This may
be the explanation why Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia cases
are skyrocketing in the U.S. and many developed countries.
So even if you haven't been leading the healthiest
lifestyle thus far, making some positive changes now may still provide your
brain what it needs to stay healthy as you age. The following are tips on how
to keep your brain young and healthy.
Control
Your Blood Glucose Levels
Latest studies show that people with type 2 diabetes are
twice as likely to develop Alzheimer's compared with people who are
non-diabetic. There is increasing evidence that even pre-diabetics are already
at increased risk of cognitive decline.
Diabetes is normally associated with insulin resistance,
a condition by which the cells in the body have become unresponsive to insulin.
Recently, researchers have discovered a new type of insulin resistance called
brain insulin resistance.
In this case, the brain is unable to access the insulin
in the blood. As a result, brain cells are unable to utilize glucose which is
its main source of fuel, causing them to degenerate and die. As neurons in the
brain are lost, the brain shrinks, and memory and cognitive skills decline.
Scientists are now labeling this new type of brain insulin resistance type 3
diabetes.
Lifestyle choices are a major contributing factor to
insulin resistance. Being overweight, consuming excess foods loaded with
carbohydrates (sugar, fruits, grains, legumes, starchy vegetables), and being
sedentary are all known factors leading to insulin resistance.
Lose
Your Spare Tire
There is a connection between abdominal fat and your
brain. The deeper layer of visceral fat cells around your waist is like an
active organ producing hormones that can cause higher insulin levels.
The brain has a lot of insulin receptors and they are
concentrated in the hippocampus, which plays important roles in the
consolidation of information from short-term to long-term memory and spatial
navigation. Scientists found that the enzyme that breaks down insulin also
breaks down beta-amyloid, the sticky protein that mucks up the brains in people
with Alzheimer's.
However, this enzyme prefers to break down insulin. So
if you have excess insulin, the enzyme will work on the insulin rather than the
beta-amyloid, resulting in its accumulation. For this reason, in Alzheimer's
patients, the hippocampus is one of the first regions of the brain to suffer
damage. Memory problems and disorientation often appear among the first
symptoms.
Exercise
Research finds that with dementia, there is a shrinkage
of the dendrites (branched projections of a neuron) that connect the neurons.
There is also less production of neurotransmitters and the hippocampus gets
smaller.
Numerous studies found that aerobic exercise encourages
your brain to work at optimum capacity by causing nerve cells to multiply,
strengthening their interconnections, and protecting them from damage. For older
people, aerobic exercise is very effective in boosting executive skills that
includes planning, scheduling, multi-tasking, dealing with ambiguity and
working memory (the ability to store short-term memory and process the
information). So, if you want to boost your brain size, go for a brisk walk
every day.
Eat
a Clean, Healthy Diet
Like the rest of your body, your brain depends on clean,
healthy foods to function. While protein is the main source of fuel for your
brain, antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals from fresh vegetables are just as
important, as is limiting sugar intake.
Nutrients
that benefit your brain:
Omega-3 fats are essential for the health of the
protective myelin or sheath (which is made of 60% fat) that covers the
communicating neurons. Wild Alaskan salmon is a rich source of omega-3 fats. If
you take a supplement, make sure the fish is sourced from clean, pristine, and
uncontaminated water.
Vitamin B12 is critically needed to form healthy myelin
and prevent brain shrinkage. B12 is available in natural form only from animal
sources (meats, eggs, dairy products). Many supplements and fortified foods use
the synthetic form of B12 which is not as well absorbed by the body.
Coconut oil. Brain cells of people with Alzheimer's
don't utilize glucose well. Glucose is the brain's primary fuel, enabling
neurons to produce acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter necessary for coherent
thought. Without acetylcholine, you experience mental confusion and memory
loss. Coconut oil provides ketones as an alternative fuel source to glucose
that feeds the brain, restores and renews neurons, and prevents brain
shrinkage.
Avoid
these neurotoxins in your diet:
- · Artificial sweeteners such as aspartame
- · MSG
- · Pesticides and herbicides
- · PCBs (common in farmed salmon)
- · Heavy metals such as mercury (dental amalgam fillings, many fish species), aluminum (antiperspirants, aluminum cookware), lead (paint, lead pipes), and copper (copper cookware, copper pipes)
- · Trans fat (hydrogenated polyunsaturated vegetable oils)
Get
Sufficient Vitamin D
Researchers have uncovered strong links between low
levels of vitamin D and increased risk of cognitive impairment. In addition,
there is ample evidence that suggests vitamin D is neuroprotective by reducing
inflammation and promoting healthy brain development and function.
Since most people, especially the elderly, don't get
much sun exposure or are always wearing sunscreen, it is vital to take a
vitamin D3 supplement. Dosage will vary from person to person but it is
generally safe to take up to 10,000 IU per day. The only way to know is to get
a blood test for your 25(OH)D level. The optimal range is between 50-70 ng/mL.
Protect
Your Brain from Cell Phones
The World Health Organization has recently announced
that radiation from cell phones is a possible carcinogen to the brain. The
agency found evidence of increased glioma (brain tumor) and acoustic neuroma
(tumor on your auditory nerve) for mobile phone users. It now lists mobile
phone in the same "carcinogenic hazard" category as lead, engine
exhaust, and chloroform.
Don't hold the phone next to your ear instead, use a
wired earpiece or the speakerphone function. The further the phone is from you,
the less radiation is absorbed.
Cell phones emit the most radiation when they are attempting
to connect to cell towers. A moving phone or a phone in an area with a weak
signal has to work harder, emitting more radiation. To reduce your radiation
exposure, avoid holding cell phones close to your head in elevators, buildings,
and rural areas.
Challenge
Your Mind
The brain is like a muscle. If you challenge it, it will
get stronger. Mind-training activities stimulate blood flow, strengthen the
synapses between neurons, and keep your brain fit as you age.
- · Reading challenging books
- · Learning a new language
- · Playing a musical instrument
- · Playing games such as crossword puzzles, Scrabble, and sudoku
- · Mastering a new hobby
- · Engaging in friendly debates
Limit
TV
Last but not least, when you watch TV, your brain goes
into neutral. People watching TV have increased alpha brain waves, meaning
their brains are in a passive state as if they are just sitting in the dark. It
is no wonder that too much TV watching has been linked to low achievement.
Carol Chuang is a Certified Nutrition Specialist and a
Metabolic Typing Advisor. She has a Masters degree in Nutrition and is the
founder of CC Health Counseling, LLC. Her passion in life is to stay healthy
and to help others become healthy. She believes that a key ingredient to
optimal health is to eat a diet that is right for one's specific body type.
Eating organic or eating healthy is not enough to guarantee good health. The
truth is that there is no one diet that is right for everyone. Our metabolisms
are different, so should our diets. Carol specializes in Metabolic Typing,
helping her clients find the right diet for their Metabolic Type. To learn more
about Metabolic Typing, her nutrition counseling practice, and how to get a
complimentary phone consultation, please go to http://cchealthcounseling.com/
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Keeping Your Brain Young and Healthy

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