Why Exercise Makes You Less Anxious

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from Phys Ed: Why Exercise Makes You Less Anxious - Well Blog - NYTimes.com

November 18, 2009, 12:01 am

Phys Ed: Why Exercise Makes You Less Anxious
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

Researchers at Princeton University recently made a remarkable discovery about the brains of rats that exercise. Some of their neurons respond differently to stress than the neurons of slothful rats. Scientists have known for some time that exercise stimulates the creation of new brain cells (neurons) but not how, precisely, these neurons might be functionally different from other brain cells.

In the experiment, preliminary results of which were presented last month at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Chicago, scientists allowed one group of rats to run. Another set of rodents was not allowed to exercise. Then all of the rats swam in cold water, which they don’t like to do. Afterward, the scientists examined the animals’ brains. They found that the stress of the swimming activated neurons in all of the brains. (The researchers could tell which neurons were activated because the cells expressed specific genes in response to the stress.) But the youngest brain cells in the running rats, the cells that the scientists assumed were created by running, were less likely to express the genes. They generally remained quiet. The “cells born from running,” the researchers concluded, appeared to have been “specifically buffered from exposure to a stressful experience.” The rats had created, through running, a brain that seemed biochemically, molecularly, calm.

For years, both in popular imagination and in scientific circles, it has been a given that exercise enhances mood. But how exercise, a physiological activity, might directly affect mood and anxiety — psychological states — was unclear. Now, thanks in no small part to improved research techniques and a growing understanding of the biochemistry and the genetics of thought itself, scientists are beginning to tease out how exercise remodels the brain, making it more resistant to stress. In work undertaken at the University of Colorado, Boulder, for instance, scientists have examined the role of serotonin, a neurotransmitter often considered to be the “happy” brain chemical. That simplistic view of serotonin has been undermined by other researchers, and the University of Colorado work further dilutes the idea. In those experiments, rats taught to feel helpless and anxious, by being exposed to a laboratory stressor, showed increased serotonin activity in their brains. But rats that had run for several weeks before being stressed showed less serotonin activity and were less anxious and helpless despite the stress.

Other researchers have looked at how exercise alters the activity of dopamine, another neurotransmitter in the brain, while still others have concentrated on the antioxidant powers of moderate exercise. Anxiety in rodents and people has been linked with excessive oxidative stress, which can lead to cell death, including in the brain. Moderate exercise, though, appears to dampen the effects of oxidative stress. In an experiment led by researchers at the University of Houston and reported at the Society for Neuroscience meeting, rats whose oxidative-stress levels had been artificially increased with injections of certain chemicals were extremely anxious when faced with unfamiliar terrain during laboratory testing. But rats that had exercised, even if they had received the oxidizing chemical, were relatively nonchalant under stress. When placed in the unfamiliar space, they didn’t run for dark corners and hide, like the unexercised rats. They insouciantly explored.

“It looks more and more like the positive stress of exercise prepares cells and structures and pathways within the brain so that they’re more equipped to handle stress in other forms,” says Michael Hopkins, a graduate student affiliated with the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory Laboratory at Dartmouth, who has been studying how exercise differently affects thinking and emotion. “It’s pretty amazing, really, that you can get this translation from the realm of purely physical stresses to the realm of psychological stressors.”

The stress-reducing changes wrought by exercise on the brain don’t happen overnight, however, as virtually every researcher agrees. In the University of Colorado experiments, for instance, rats that ran for only three weeks did not show much reduction in stress-induced anxiety, but those that ran for at least six weeks did. “Something happened between three and six weeks,” says Benjamin Greenwood, a research associate in the Department of Integrative Physiology at the University of Colorado, who helped conduct the experiments. Dr. Greenwood added that it was “not clear how that translates” into an exercise prescription for humans. We may require more weeks of working out, or maybe less. And no one has yet studied how intense the exercise needs to be. But the lesson, Dr. Greenwood says, is “don’t quit.” Keep running or cycling or swimming. (Animal experiments have focused exclusively on aerobic, endurance-type activities.) You may not feel a magical reduction of stress after your first jog, if you haven’t been exercising. But the molecular biochemical changes will begin, Dr. Greenwood says. And eventually, he says, they become “profound.”
 

Why

Well-known member
yea ive been working out and it really relieves stress and makes me feel more confident and energetic, i really see no reason why NOT to exercise, even if minimal.
 

philly2bits

Well-known member
Exercise does make me feel better. I haven't noticed it effecting my mood when I am not exercising, but I might not be paying enough attention.
 

emmasma

Well-known member
Thanks this is a good article and I agree completely! More doctors should be recommending exercise instead of just automatically giving medication. Taking care of your body really effects you full circle.

I do have one question though; How is this a "remarkable discovery"? This is what I have read and heard everywhere from the beginning. It really does help. The problem is if you are depressed it is hard to motivate yourself to do it.
 

philly2bits

Well-known member
I think motivation is the hardest part about exercising, except for the actual workouts themselves. Without motivation, it's very unlikely anyone would try to do something they know will be hard work.
 

agoraphobickatie

Well-known member
yeah, emmasma, motivation is tough =/ i could list every reason in the world why i should exercise, but i just don't.. i really hate that! haha... it annoys the hell out of me, i always think "okay tomorrow... i'm going to exercise.. and i'll do it everyday after that... i'll just wake up and start DOING IT!" ...and then i never do! ugh!!

anyway, my therapist says two grrrreat things to help with anxiety/depression is exercise and sleep... apparently, we have hella energy since we use a lot of it to worry worry worry, and exercising helps waste some of that, plus endorphins and all that jazz... and i know having a really healthy/consistent sleep schedule helps keep us balanced as well, but alas.. it's also hard to do... damn, this makes me feel bad just to write this, i need to freakin' exercise and sleep right!!! haha
 

Iseesky

Well-known member
Totally agree with the article. To be honest, the only time I exercise is if I'm worried, stressed or sad. It makes me feel 100 times better and always puts me in a good mood. Even if just for a few hours. :)
 

Harleyq

Well-known member
Exercise is probably the best way I've found to naturally get rid of stress. Whenever I get bad anxiety, I like to go running.
 
Yeah I go swimming when im particularly tense/stressed. Best way to get motivated is just forcing yourself, then each time you do it it takes less motivation. Its just taking that first step. A complaint I hear alot is "dont have the time". But you actually do, you just have to manage yout time better. If you have too much you have to remove other activities and fit the ones with higher priority in.
 

Tiercel

Well-known member
I wish I could run.

I was born with a clubfoot, which I jokingly blame on my twin sister. It was taken care of when I was very young, so I got to grow up normally. My right calf is smaller, and about half an inch shorter than the left calf. By the end of high school, though, every time I ran or spent too much time on my feet my ankle hurt. Now I know it's just a screwy bone structure that causes the pain. Basically, when I stand normally on my foot, my shin bone digs into the top of whatever bone(s) is on the top of my foot. Really all I need is an X-acto blade, a hammer, and a chisel, and I could probably fix it myself. I don't know if surgery could do anything for me or not, but I can't afford it anyway right now.

So I guess technically, I can run. It just hurts like hell during and afterward, and not the good kind of hurt.

But I've often thought about getting a bike as an alternative to running. And unless I want to try the Delaware River, there's really nowhere I could go swimming aside from paying to join a health club that I'd probably never attend. Especially now that summer's over.

So until I decide what to do about that, I have some dumbbells to throw around, and enough floorspace for pushups, crunches, squats, etc.
 

kramnrublaw

New member
I somewhat agree. If you have low to moderate SA, exercise will most likely do wonders. Being on the severe side can make exercise a difficult task. Joining a gym is out because of SA. I can't jog outside because of people and even cars. It would be nice if I lived in a western town with a long, dirt road that was rarely traveled. When I drove a semi truck for a living I would often stop in eastern Colorado and jog down such a road. I run on a treadmill and have noticed only one pleasant after effect. I feel more confident, but that only lasts for an hour or two. That greatly reduces my motivation to jog the next day. For some reason I just cannot have anyone around or within viewing distance of me when i'm jogging. Like a previous poster, I have thought about befriending a jogger in hopes that I would finally be able to publicly jog. I have tried online websites and have spoke with a few interested people. When it comes time to meet, I stop talking to them.


Any advice? Treadmill jogging is so monotonous. I live in Kansas city, Missouri. If anyone knows of an outdoor, secluded place I would love to be informed.
 

DillJenkins

Well-known member
Exercising definitely makes me less anxious. Its kind of like a high that you have to work for. Thats why its not as reinforcing as drugs and stuff like that.

I would like to exercise more but sometimes im just really tired from work or whatever and sleep instead.
 
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