Optical neuroimaging method helps show relationship between male brain activity and fitness

Oct. 23, 2015
An optical neuroimaging method has helped show the direct relationship between male brain activity and function, as well as fitness.

With the aid of an optical neuroimaging method, researchers at the University of Tsukuba (Japan) have shown the direct relationship between brain activity, brain function, and physical fitness in a group of older Japanese men. They found that the fitter men performed better mentally than the less fit men, by using parts of their brains in the same way as in their youth.

Related: Imaging distributed function and networks in the human brain

As we age, we use different parts of our brain compared to our younger selves. For example, when young, we mainly use the left side of our prefrontal cortex (PFC) for mental tasks involving short-term memory, understanding the meaning of words and the ability to recognize previously encountered events, objects, or people. When older, we tend to use the equivalent parts of our PFC on the right side of the brain for these tasks. The PFC is located in the very front of the brain, just behind the forehead. It has roles in executive function, memory, intelligence, language, and vision.

With tasks involving the temporary storage and manipulation of memory, long-term memories and inhibitory control, young adults favor the right side of the PFC, while older adults engage both the right and left PFC. In fact, with aging, we tend to use both sides of the PFC during mental tasks, rather than just one. This phenomenon has been dubbed hemispheric asymmetry reduction in older adults (HAROLD) and reflects the reorganization of the brain as compensation for reduced brain capacity and efficiency because of the age-related structural and physiological decline.

In the study, 60 older men (aged 64-75 years) underwent an exercise test to measure their aerobic fitness. The men, whose physical fitness was found to vary widely, then performed a test to measure their selective attention, executive function, and reaction time. This well-known color-word matching Stroop test involved showing the men words meaning color, such as blue, green, red, but asking them to name the color of the letters rather than read the word itself. When the color of the letters does not match the word—blue, red, green—it takes the brain longer to react. This reaction time is used as a measurement of brain function. Activity in the PFC region of the mens’ brains was measured throughout the test using an optical neuroimaging technique called functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). This technique provides a measure of blood oxygen concentration in surface blood vessels, indicative of activity in the brain’s outer layers, using a set of wearable probes in a cap that is placed on the head. Active brain cells require fresh oxygenated blood, which dislodges the deoxygenated blood from that region. fNIRS measures the changes in color between oxygenated red blood and blue deoxygenated blood and, thus, indirectly measures brain activity.

Stroop-interference-related cortical activation patterns.

The results from these tests were combined and statistically analyzed to explore the associations between aerobic fitness, Stroop reaction time, and brain activity during the Stroop test. As predicted for older adults, during the Stroop test both sides of the PFC are active, with no difference between right and left, verifying the HAROLD phenomenon amongst this group of men. Previous studies have shown that young adults favor the left side of the PFC for this task.

Analysis of the relationship between brain activity and Stroop reaction time revealed that those men that favored the left side of the PFC while performing the Stroop test had faster reaction times. This indicates that older adults who use the more youth-like, task-related side of the brain perform better in this test. Next, the association between aerobic fitness and Stroop reaction time was analyzed. Fitter men had shorter reaction times.

Based on these findings, the researchers correctly predicted that higher aerobic fitness would be associated with higher left-PFC activity. In other words, fitter men tend to use the more youth-like side of their brains, at least while performing the Stroop test.

Using statistical tests called mediation analyses to look at the interactions between aerobic fitness, mental performance, and brain activation, the researchers found that aerobically fitter older men can perform better mentally than less-fit older men by using the more important brain regions when needed. In fact, the fitter older men are using parts of their brains in the same way as when they were younger.

Dr. Hideaki Soya, who led the work, says “one possible explanation suggested by the research is that the volume and integrity of the white matter in the part of brain that links the two sides declines with age. There is some evidence to support the theory that fitter adults are able to better maintain this white matter than less fit adults, but further study is needed to confirm this theory.”

The researchers are looking to perform this study in aging women as well.

Full details of the work appear in the journal NeuroImage; for more information, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.09.062.

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About the Author

BioOptics World Editors

We edited the content of this article, which was contributed by outside sources, to fit our style and substance requirements. (Editor’s Note: BioOptics World has folded as a brand and is now part of Laser Focus World, effective in 2022.)

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