The Exercise-Free Way to Improve Heart Health and Lower Stress

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The Exercise-Free Way to Improve Heart Health and Lower Stress

Don’t get it twisted. Meditation isn’t magic mumbo-jumbo. The practice has been probed, prodded, and scrutinized by some of the world’s best scientists. Their findings reveal evidence that behind a meditator’s feelings of calm and openness lie measurable physiological changes in the brain and bodily systems.

Here are a few thought-provoking studies that address some of the seemingly mystical effects of meditation through the rigorous lens of scientific examination.

Meditation for Heart Health

In astudy published in 2012in an American Heart Association journal, researchers found that African Americans with heart disease who practiced transcendental meditation (TM) twice a day were at a lower risk of stroke, heart attack and death. Practicing TM daily also helped lower blood pressure, anxiety and anger.

The research subjects were divided into two groups. One group was asked to incorporate at least 20 minutes of heart-healthy practices into their daily lives; a second group was taught TM and asked to practice it twice per day for 20 minutes. After three-month and six-month evaluations, the data showed that the meditation group displayed greater risk reduction for heart disease.

Though the study focused on the African American community—the group most prone to heart disease-related deaths in the United States—researchers concluded that practicing TM can help alleviate heart disease risk for healthy and unhealthy people of all races, and even suggested that doctors prescribe it to their patients.

Meditation for Anti-Aging

According toUCLA researchpublished earlier this year, meditation can be linked to a reduced risk of the mental illnesses and neurodegenerative diseases associated with aging. These ailments are caused by the decrease of the brain’s gray matter (the tissue that contains neurons).

The study examined the brains of 100 adult men and women, split into equal percentages of meditators and non-meditators, between the ages of 24 and 77.

The results revealed that the meditating group preserved a larger portion of the brain’s gray matter across wider regions of the brain than did their non-meditating counterparts. Though researchers are cautious about directly linking meditation to the cause of these differences, the research provides strong implications for meditation’s effect on quality of life (by helping preserve brain function) for the aging.

Meditation for Stress Management

Late last year, researchers from Harvard University and the University of Siena teamed up to study the physiological changes that occur in the brain that facilitate the meditator’s ability to better manage stress and increase self-awareness and concentration.

Twenty-four subjects were given MRIs before and after they began an eight-week meditation course and 45-minute daily meditation practice. TheMRI findings revealedthat the physiological portion of the brain that deals with emotions and perceptions had thickened after the eight weeks.

这些生理变化支持一般cknowledged psychological effects of meditation, such as decreases in anxiety, depression, stress and confusion.

Meditation for Pain Relief

In 2011, MIT and Harvard neuroscientists conducteda studythat concluded that meditation helps to mitigate pain, and that meditators are less reactive to stress.

The reason, researchers found, lies in meditation’s ability to elevate alpha waves, which are the cells in the brain that help suppress distracting and irrelevant senses such as pain.

The research included six meditators—who were asked to meditate for 45-minutes a day over an eight week period—and six non-meditators. An MRI was conducted before and after this period, and only the meditating group showed a difference in alpha-wave size. The baseline findings among the meditators had increased, while that of the non-meditators had remained virtually the same.

Kinisha Correiafor Wanderlust

This post is part of Wanderlust and MyFitnessPal’s28-day Run-Yoga-Meditate challenge. Whether you are new to one (or all three!) of these activities, join us to gain a healthier mind and body in less than a month.

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Wanderlust
Wanderlust

The mission of Wanderlust.com is to help you find your true north. We share knowledge—modern and ancient, hidden in far off places and close to home, everyday and exceptional. We empower you to live an inspired, happy and purpose-driven life. Read more articles like this one and find out about our events atWanderlust.com.

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