Exercise silences stress in the brain
By MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Results from a new study indicate that physical activity may help protect against cardiovascular disease in part by reducing stress-related brain activity
This effect in the brain may help to explain
why study participants with depression (a stress-related condition) experienced
the greatest cardiovascular benefits from physical activity.
New research indicates that physical activity
lowers cardiovascular disease risk in part by reducing stress-related signaling
in the brain.
In the study, which was led by investigators
at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), a founding member of the Mass General
Brigham healthcare system and published in the Journal
of the American College of Cardiology, people with stress-related
conditions such as depression experienced the most cardiovascular benefits from
physical activity.
To assess the mechanisms underlying the psychological and cardiovascular disease benefits of physical activity, Ahmed Tawakol, MD, an investigator and cardiologist in the Cardiovascular Imaging Research Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, and his colleagues analyzed medical records and other information of 50,359 participants from the Mass General Brigham Biobank who completed a physical activity survey.
A subset of 774 participants also underwent
brain imaging tests and measurements of stress-related brain activity.
Over a median follow-up of 10 years, 12.9% of
participants developed cardiovascular disease. Participants who met physical
activity recommendations had a 23% lower risk of developing cardiovascular
disease compared with those not meeting these recommendations.
Individuals with higher levels of physical
activity also tended to have lower stress-related brain activity. Notably,
reductions in stress-associated brain activity were driven by gains in function
in the prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain involved in executive function
(i.e., decision-making, impulse control) and is known to restrain stress
centers of the brain. Analyses accounted for other lifestyle variables and risk
factors for coronary disease.
Moreover, reductions in stress-related brain
signaling partially accounted for physical activity’s cardiovascular benefit.
As an extension of this finding, the
researchers found in a cohort of 50,359 participants that the cardiovascular
benefit of exercise was substantially greater among participants who would be
expected to have higher stress-related brain activity, such as those with
pre-existing depression.
“Physical activity was roughly twice as
effective in lowering cardiovascular disease risk among those with depression.
Effects on the brain’s stress-related activity may explain this novel
observation,” says Tawakol, who is the senior author of the study.
“Prospective studies are needed to identify
potential mediators and to prove causality. In the meantime, clinicians could
convey to patients that physical activity may have important brain effects,
which may impart greater cardiovascular benefits among individuals with
stress-related syndromes such as depression.”
Reference: “Effect of Stress-Related Neural
Pathways on the Cardiovascular Benefit of Physical Activity” by Hadil Zureigat,
Michael T. Osborne, Shady Abohashem, Kenechukwu Mezue, Charbel Gharios, Simran
Grewal, Alex Cardeiro, Nicki Naddaf, Giovanni Civieri, Taimur Abbasi, Azar
Radfar, Wesam Aldosoky, Antonia V. Seligowski, Meagan M. Wasfy, James Sawalla
Guseh, Timothy W. Churchill, Rachel P. Rosovsky, Zahi Fayad, Anthony
Rosenzweig, Aaron Baggish, Roger K. Pitman, Karmel W. Choi, Jordan Smoller,
Lisa M. Shin and Ahmed Tawakol, 15 April 2024, Journal of the American College
of Cardiology.
DOI:
10.1016/j.jacc.2024.02.029
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health.