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Ilona Meagher

Active.com | Sensory Cues - 0 views

  • Proprioceptive cues are images and other sensory cues that enable you to modify your running stride for the better as you think about them while running.
  • Using proprioceptive cues effectively requires concentration and discipline. Our natural tendency is to let our thoughts wander aimlessly while running. If you're serious about improving your stride, you must fight this tendency by forcing yourself to concentrate on and execute a particular proprioceptive cue for hundreds of consecutive strides.
  • You'll get the best results from proprioceptive cues if you use one at a time throughout the entire length of a run and you use them generally at least three times a week every week. Because proprioceptive cues require you to use your muscles differently than they are accustomed to being used, certain muscles may fatigue more quickly, so it's best to begin using each specific proprioceptive cue only during short recovery runs.
Ilona Meagher

domain-b. | Brain rhythm associated with learning also linked to running speed, UCLA st... - 0 views

  • Rhythms in the brain that are associated with learning become stronger as the body moves faster, UCLA neurophysicists report in a new study.
  • electrical signal known as the gamma rhythm in the brains of mice. This signal is typically produced in a brain region called the hippocampus, which is critical for learning and memory, during periods of concentration and learning.
  • The hippocampus is thought to rapidly and temporarily record facts and events as they are experienced,
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  • During subsequent sleep, these temporary memories are thought to be consolidated to other brain regions for storage. If the hippocampus is damaged, it becomes very difficult to learn new things.
Ilona Meagher

The Globe and Mail | 4 cool things you should know about running in heat - 0 views

  • “Slowing down in the heat could be a subconscious regulation to protect us from damage, such as heat stroke,”
  • In other words, you don’t slow down because your body has reached some critical temperature. Instead, your brain slows you down to prevent you from ever reaching that critical temperature. It’s a subtle difference – but as the cyclists in the study discovered, it means that our physical “limits” are more negotiable than previously thought.
  • “To obtain a substantial heat adaptation, core temperature must be elevated and high sweat rates need to occur,” Dr. Jay explains. “The best way to do this is to combine exercise with heat exposure.”The study volunteers had averaged just 18 minutes a day of “moderate” or “intense” physical activity outdoors. In contrast, researchers have found that proper acclimatization takes 45 to 60 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise in the heat, either for seven to 10 consecutive days, or four to five times a week for two to three weeks.
Ilona Meagher

Herald-News | Treating the 4 common injuries runners most often experience - 0 views

  • Running has continued to increase in popularity in the United States over the past decade. The number of finishers of United States marathons cracked the half-million mark for the first time in 2010, according to Running USA.
  • according to the American Academy of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, about 70 percent of all runners will be injured at one time during their running career.
  • The four most common running injuries that occur are iliotibial band syndrome, patellofemoral syndrome, Achilles tendinitis and plantar fasciitis.
Ilona Meagher

Wired Science | City Life Could Change Your Brain for the Worse - 0 views

  • A study of German college students suggests that urbanite brains are more susceptible to stress, particularly social stress, than those of country dwellers.
  • Meyer-Lindenberg’s findings, published June 23 in Nature, are a neurological investigation into the underpinnings of a disturbing social trend: As a rule, city life seems to generate mental illness. Compared to their rural counterparts, city dwellers have higher levels of anxiety and mood disorders. The schizophrenia risk of people raised in cities is almost double. Literature on the effect is so thorough that researchers say it’s not just correlation, as might be expected if anxious people preferred to live in cities. Neither is it a result of heredity. It’s a cause-and-effect relationship between environment and mind.
  • cities are hyper-social places, in which residents must be constantly on guard, and have mathematically more opportunity to experience stressful interaction. Too much stress may ultimately alter the brain, leaving it ill-equipped to handle further stress and prone to mental illness.
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  • The city kids displayed heightened levels of activity in two brain regions: the amygdala, which is central to processing emotion and stress, and the perigenual anterior cingulate cortex, which regulates the amygdala. In short, city brains had disproportionately amplified responses to social stress. They’d become sensitized.
  • Meyer-Lindenberg and colleagues initially tested 16 male and 16 female college students
  • The larger the city in which a student lived, the more active their amygdala. The longer they’d lived in a city as a child, the more active their cingulate cortex. In other studies, the cingulate cortex has been described as especially sensitive to early-life stress, with alterations linked to adult psychological problems.
  • Communication between the cingulate cortex and amygdala also seemed to be less efficient in city dwellers.
Ilona Meagher

Piedmont Newnan Hospital: Feeling Good after Exercise Lasts Longer than Expected - 0 views

  • "Moderate intensity aerobic exercise improves mood immediately and those improvements can last up to 12 hours," concludes study
  • The mood of the exercisers was better than that of the sedentary group immediately after the workout and for up to 12 hours later. "This goes a long way to show that even moderate aerobic exercise has the potential to mitigate the daily stress that results in your mood being disturbed," he says. Men and women seemed to benefit equally, and the fitness level of the participant did not seem to matter
Ilona Meagher

ScienceDaily: Stop And Smell The Flowers -- The Scent Really Can Soothe Stress - 0 views

  • Feeling stressed? Then try savoring the scent of lemon, mango, lavender, or other fragrant plants. Scientists in Japan are reporting the first scientific evidence that inhaling certain fragrances alter gene activity and blood chemistry in ways that can reduce stress levels. 
  • people have inhaled the scent of certain plants since ancient times to help reduce stress, fight inflammation and depression, and induce sleep. Aromatherapy, the use of fragrant plant oils to improve mood and health, has become a popular form of alternative medicine today. And linalool is one of the most widely used substances to soothe away emotional stress.
  • Linalool returned stress-elevated levels of neutrophils and lymphocytes — key parts of the immune system — to near-normal levels. Inhaling linalool also reduced the activity of more than 100 genes that go into overdrive in stressful situations.
Ilona Meagher

Runner's World Peak Performance | March 14: The "Afterburn" Exists, and It Can Be Very ... - 0 views

  • David Nieman, DrPH (photo above), and colleagues have shown that you DO burn a lot of calories after exercising, at least if you exercise at an intensity roughly equal to 70 percent of your vo2 max. That's a little slower than your marathon pace, but a little faster than your everyday EZ run pace.
  • In Nieman's study, a group of 10 healthy young-adult males (including three clinically obese subjects) burned 519 calories while exercising for 45 minutes on an exercise bike. Then, over the next 14 hours, they burned an additional 190 calories (above their normal calorie burn) while just sitting around.That's a 37 percent boost beyond the calories burned on the bikes. Another way of looking at it: If you burn 500 calories by running about 5 miles, you can gain almost another 2 miles of running through your after-burn calories. Thus, 5 miles becomes 7 miles, at least in terms of calorie-burning. That's great news for runners and other vigorous exercisers.
Ilona Meagher

Lethbridge Herald | Teen to run for cancer research - 0 views

  • Dyllan Duperron, a 15-year-old Grade 10 student from Valleyview, is to embark on his cross-Alberta run this morning at the Jack Ady Cancer Centre in Chinook Regional Hospital. It will take him northward the next two months, through his hometown, before wrapping up in Grande Prairie. Cancer has struck several of Duperron's loved ones, and he's launching his Today's Hope, Tomorrow's Cure campaign because he wants to do something that will help other families facing similar battles with the disease.
  • Although Duperron is a track-and-field athlete, distance running isn't his specialty. A sprinter, he's more accustomed to running 100-metre and 200m races. For this campaign, he plans to run 30-50 km each day he's on the road. He admitted he's a little nervous about such an undertaking. "It's a very, very long way. It's over 1,000 kilometres. It's exciting, but I'm still nervous," he told The Herald Sunday.
Ilona Meagher

Clinical Pediatrics | Running-Related Injuries in School-Age Children and Adolescents T... - 0 views

  • Running for exercise is a popular way to motivate children to be physically active. Running-related injuries are well studied in adults but little information exists for children and adolescents. Through use of the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System database, cases of running-related injuries were selected by using activity codes for exercise (which included running and jogging). Sample weights were used to calculate national estimates. An estimated 225 344 children and adolescents 6 to 18 years old were treated in US emergency departments for running-related injuries. The annual number of cases increased by 34.0% over the study period. One third of the injuries involved a running-related fall and more than one half of the injuries occurred at school. The majority of injuries occurred to the lower extremities and resulted in a sprain or strain. These findings emphasize the need for scientific evidence-based guidelines for pediatric running. The high proportion of running-related falls warrants further research.
Ilona Meagher

MedNews | Obesity Among American Kids Driven By Lifestyle, Not Genes - 0 views

  • Obese children in America are much less physically active, consume larger quantities of food during school meals, and watch much more TV than their normal-weight schoolmates, researchers from the University of Michigan Medical School revealed in The American Heart Journal. Lifestyle is by far the major driving force behind childhood obesity in the USA, and not heredity, the authors stressed after examining data on check-ups of 1,003 Michigan sixth-graders in a school-based health program.
  • The obese children in this study tended to eat a school lunch rather than a packed one made at home, and spent a considerable amount of time either playing video games or watching television.
  • 58% of the obese children in the study had watched at least two hours of TV the day before, the authors reported, compared to 41% among the other kids. 34% of non-obese children ate school lunches regularly, compared to 45% of the obese ones. Regular exercise, being a member of a school sports team, and rates of physical activity were considerably lower among the obese pupils.
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  • Because of observed eating and physical activity habits, the researchers believe lifestyle is the driving force behind America's childhood obesity explosion, not genetics. They are not saying genetics does not play a part at all, but that genetics is not the major factor.
Ilona Meagher

American Journal of Medicine | Adherence to Healthy Lifestyle Habits in US Adults, 1988... - 0 views

  • Lifestyle choices are associated with cardiovascular disease and mortality. The purpose of this study was to compare adherence to healthy lifestyle habits in adults between 1988 and 2006.
  • Analysis of adherence to 5 healthy lifestyle trends (≥5 fruits and vegetables/day, regular exercise >12 times/month, maintaining healthy weight [body mass index 18.5-29.9 kg/m2], moderate alcohol consumption [up to 1 drink/day for women, 2/day for men] and not smoking) in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1988-1994 were compared with results from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2001-2006 among adults aged 40-74 years.
  • Generally, adherence to a healthy lifestyle pattern has decreased during the last 18 years, with decreases documented in 3 of 5 healthy lifestyle habits. These findings have broad implications for the future risk of cardiovascular disease in adults.
Ilona Meagher

FastLane: USDOT | 17-yr-old Jasmine Jordan, youngest to run across US, raises awareness... - 0 views

  • In less than two weeks, Jazzy will run into New York City, completing her run across the US that began in Los Angeles in September 2009.
  • Even more impressive than her record-setting effort--she will be the youngest ever to run across America--is that she's doing this to raise awareness and funds for the St. Christopher Fund for trucker relief.
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