- Younger
Next Year: A Guide to Living Like 50 Until You’re
80 and Beyond, Chris Crowley and Henry S. Lodge,
Workman Publishing.
- Keep Your
Brain Alive, Lawrence Katz, Ph.D. and Manning Rubin,
Workman Publishing.
- Keep Your
Brain Young, Guy McKhann, M.D., Marilyn Albert, Ph.D.,
Wiley Publishing.
- Parkinson’s
Disease and the Art of Moving, John Argue, New Harbinger
Publications, Inc.
Living
with Parkinson’s: Strategies for Patients (pdf)
The
PD Exercise Guide (pdf)
Book - The Brain that Changes Itself by Dr.
Norman Doidge - Penguin Books
Page 255 "Physical activity is helpful
not only because it creates new neurons but because the mind
is based in the brain and the brain needs oxygen. Walking,
cycling or cardiovascular exercise strengthens the heart and
the blood vessels that supply the brain and helps people engaged
in those activities feel mentally sharper....recent research
shows that exercise stimulates the production and releases
of the neuronal growth factor BDNE , which plays a crucial
role effecting plasticity change. In fact whatever keeps the
heart and blood vessels fit invigorates the brain. ... Exercise
stimulates your sensory and motor cornices and maintains your
brain's balance system."
Book - Defying Dementia by DR. Robert Levine
- Praeger
"Exercise is essential at every stage
of our lives, but perhaps even more so as we grow older. Exercise
plays a significant role in reducing vascular risk factors....heart
function and circulation are enhanced. Muscle strength and
balance are improved....endorphin levels are raised by aerobic
exercise melting away, stress, depression and anxiety."
Review: Harvard Magazine March/April 2004
issue.
Comment from Paul Green: The power of exercise
and its effect on the brain was confirmed for me in this article
titled "The Deadliest Sin - From survival of the fittest
to staying fit just to survive - scientists probe the benefits
of exercise-and the dangers of sloth." The whole article
is a must read and it formed much of the basis for the Never
Surrender to Parkinson's program. Here are some key excerpts:
"Keeping your heart and body in shape
is just a side benefit to exercise's major effect on the brain.
The brain is where all the action is. During exercise the
increase in cerebral blood flow creates more capillaries,
more conduits for blood to flow in the brain. So you are building
a reservoir and protecting the brain, in a way, from strokes
in the future.
"...the increase in cerebral blood
flow causes many interesting things to happen. Exercise increases
production of growth factor called BDNE or brain derived neurotrophic
factor. I call it, says John Ratey, a Harvard Medical School
associate clinical professor of psychiatry, "Miracle-Gro"
because it keep the neurons young and healthy and makes them
more ready to connect with each other. It also encourages
nuerogenesis- the creation of new nerve cells.
"... Exercise also generates the release
of neurotransmitters-norepinephrine, serotonin and dopamine."
The influence of this article on the medical
profession, in my opinion, was profound. Gradually the importance
of exercise and an active lifestyle is being recognized and
confirms that Never Surrender to Parkinson's is on the right
track.
Book - User's Guide to the Brain by John J.
Ratey, M.D. - Publisher Vintage Books, a division of Random
House
The book deals with the new realization
concerning the plasticity of the brain and its ability to
respond to environmental and physical input. The following
paragraph highlights the opportunity available to us all but
particularly those dealing with PD:
"It will be some time before efforts
to regenerate brain cells become part of established medicine.
Meanwhile for the vast majority of us, who are not debilitated
but are coping with everyday problems and with aging, the
lesson about brIan development is that we have the power to
influence our brain's ability to renew itself. The human brain's
amazing plasticity enables it to continually rewire and learn
-- not just through academic study, but through experience,
thought, action and emotion. As with our muscles, we can strengthen
our neural pathways with brain exercise. Or we can let them
wither. The principle is the same: Use it or lose it." |