Natomas Messenger

Founded 2009

 

Serving North & South Natomas & Sacramento County
 
  Home Community Finance Employment Your Home Your Money Your Kids Your Health  
  Business Education Politics Police & Fire Veterans' News Real Estate Consumer News Taxes  
  Church Food Recipes Gardening Car Care Fashion Beauty Pets  
  Lifestyles Sports Feature Writers Entertainment Environment Human Interest Technology Travel  

Your "Local Sunday Newspaper" Seven Days a Week!

Omaha Steaks Webroot Software Inc.
California Job Journal
Natomas Messenger and Rainbow Rewards
In Association with Amazon.com


Your Health

Top Five Tips To Keep Your Brain Fit

Posted: 12/21/2011

Exercising and training your brain can help improve your core cognitive abilities and keep your brain functioning at its best
Exercising and training your brain can help improve your core cognitive abilities and keep your brain functioning at its best.

(NAPSI)—Maintaining better brain health may be easier than you think. The good news is that there are practical steps you can take to enhance the way your brain functions. Following a few tips will help you remember more, think faster and perform better at work, school and in everyday life.

Five Keys

Here are five keys to improving brain health:

1. Eat right. Just as your body needs proper nutrients to function, so too does your brain. Fuel your brain by eating lots of fruits and vegetables, which contain antioxidants such as vitamins C and E that help prevent cell damage. Include some good fats such as omega-3 fatty acids in your diet—found in fish and shellfish, they constitute important building blocks in the brain. And make sure you drink plenty of water to flush out toxins and keep your brain hydrated.

2. Exercise your body. Regular physical exercise can help keep your brain fit by promoting increased levels of brain chemicals and more efficient blood circulation, which is vital to removing cellular waste and delivering nutrients needed by the brain. What’s more, studies have found that physical exercise stimulates the production of new brain cells.

3. Be social. Humans are social creatures and our brains have evolved to seek out social contact. Studies have reported that an active social life appears to delay age-related memory loss. Researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health found that individuals in their 50s and 60s who engage in a great deal of social activity had the slowest rate of memory decline, and researchers at Kaiser Permanente found that women with active social lives were half as likely to suffer from dementia.

4. Get good sleep. Sleep plays an important role in memory formation. Your brain uses sleep to process and make sense of the day, consolidate memories and even generate creative new ideas. Poor sleep can lead to an imbalance in brain chemicals, resulting in depression or cognitive deficits in processing speed, attention, memory and reasoning. A few simple changes in lifestyle, such as getting proper exercise, cutting out caffeine, relaxing before bedtime and drinking in moderation, can often help improve your quality of sleep.

5. Exercise your brain. The best exercises for your brain are new challenges that use different parts of your brain and increase in difficulty as you improve on tasks. For instance, you can learn a foreign language and then use it among native speakers, or take on a new type of dancing that exercises both the body and the brain.

You can also exercise your brain with training programs such as Lumosity.com that are designed specifically to improve brain function.

Described as a “gym for the brain,” the site offers personalized training programs and engaging exercises designed to improve core cognitive processes. The site is also available on several mobile application platforms.

To learn more, visit www.lumosity.com.

Funnies Extra
Pay Legal Ads Online
Messenger Publishing Group

Advertise With Us
About Natomas Messenger
Classified Advertising
Letters to the Editor
Previous Issues

Front Page Sports
MBK Homes

Legal Advertising Hotline
Call Dan Direct at
916-532-2113
dan@carmichaeltimes.com
Legal Advertising Rates

 



Top Stories
 

California News
 



About The Natomas Messenger | Copyright Notice
The Natomas Messenger | Paul V. Scholl, Publisher
Mailing Address: 7405 Greenback Lane, #129 | Citrus Heights, CA 95610-5603
Email: publisher@NatomasMessenger.com | Site Designed and Hosted by TheSiteBarn.com

View PDF files of Back Issues