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Just read a NY Times article highlighting a recent study (on rats), that looks at how the brain changes when the [rat] body is inactive.
Makes me wonder how our activity levels might affect our seizure control (if at all). I know some folks are triggered by exercise, but perhaps for some of us with overtstimulated brain, exercise might have a protective or preventative effect.
When the scientists looked inside the brains of their rats after the animals had been active or sedentary for about 12 weeks, they found noticeable differences between the two groups in the shape of some of the neurons in that region of the brain.
Using a computerized digitizing program to recreate the inside of the animals’ brains, the scientists established that the neurons in the brains of the running rats were still shaped much as they had been at the start of the study and were functioning normally.
But many of the neurons in the brains of the sedentary rats had sprouted far more new tentacle-like arms known as branches. Branches connect healthy neurons into the nervous system. But these neurons now had more branches than normal neurons would have, making them more sensitive to stimuli and apt to zap scattershot messages into the nervous system.
Makes me wonder how our activity levels might affect our seizure control (if at all). I know some folks are triggered by exercise, but perhaps for some of us with overtstimulated brain, exercise might have a protective or preventative effect.