daily devotionals online logo Thursday, March 28, 2024 3:24 PM GMT+1
       Reset Password        Click here to sign up.
 
daily devotionals online
Home
       our daily bread
Our Daily Bread
       the good seed
The Good Seed
       the LORD is near
The LORD is near
       andrew wommack
Andrew Wommack
       billy graham
Billy Graham
 
christian topics
Christian
       general topics
General
       interesting topics
Interesting
 

This Isolated Bolivian Tribe Has The Healthiest Brains And Hearts On Earth
Posted by Temmy
Mon, June 07, 2021 1:58pm


Tsimané Health and Life History Project Team<br>
A member of the Tsimané tribe in Bolivia.
Tsimané Health and Life History Project Team A member of the Tsimané tribe in Bolivia.

The secret to good health may lie deep in the Bolivian Amazon. There, researchers have discovered that people of the Tsimané tribe have remarkably healthier hearts and brains than Westerners.

Scientists already had a clue that the Tsimané, a tribe of about 16,000, had excellent health. A 2017 study demonstrated that they had the healthiest hearts in the world. Now, a 2021 study has confirmed that the Tsimané don't only have healthier hearts — their brains are more robust, too.

The 2021 study examined 746 Tsimané adults between the ages of 40 and 94. The Tsimané — who traveled as long as two full days from their isolated villages to Trinidad, Bolivia — underwent CT scans so that researchers could look at their brains. Once researchers had the Tsimané brain scans, they compared them to scans of adults from Germany, the United States, and the Netherlands.

Their findings echoed the 2017 study — the Tsimané had substantially healthier brains than Westerners. When researchers looked at brain volume between the two populations, they found that the difference in brain volume between middle age and old age is 70 percent smaller in Tsimané brains than in Western ones.

Although some level of brain atrophy is normal, a rapid decline can lead to cognitive impairment, functional decline, and dementia.

"The Tsimané have provided us with an amazing natural experiment on the potentially detrimental effects of modern lifestyles on our health," said the study author Andrei Irimia, an assistant professor of gerontology, neuroscience, and biomedical engineering at the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology and the USC Viterbi School of Engineering.

"These findings suggest that brain atrophy may be slowed substantially by the same lifestyle factors associated with very low risk of heart disease."

In some ways, these most recent results aren't that surprising. The Tsimané people are physically active and live by farming, hunting, and fishing. They eat a high-fiber diet that includes vegetables, fish, and lean meat. Meanwhile, Westerners are generally sedentary and consume more saturated fats.

But researchers weren't sure that the Tsimané people's healthy lifestyle would necessarily translate to a healthier brain. Although the tribe eats well and exercises, they also lack modern health care and medicine. As such, they're generally more vulnerable to infectious diseases and high levels of inflammation.

Because inflammation is associated with brain atrophy, researchers suspected that the Tsimané might have brains that atrophied quickly. Instead, they found the opposite was true.

That's crucial — suggesting that cardiovascular health can outweigh the side effects of inflammation. But the type of inflammation is important, too.

Whereas inflammation in the Tsimané is generally caused by respiratory, gastrointestinal, and parasitic infections, inflammation in Westerners is triggered by obesity and metabolic causes.

"Our sedentary lifestyle and diet rich in sugars and fats may be accelerating the loss of brain tissue with age and making us more vulnerable to diseases such as Alzheimer's," said study author Hillard Kaplan, a professor of health economics and anthropology at Chapman University who has spent years studying the Tsimané.

"The Tsimané can serve as a baseline for healthy brain aging."

However, some scientists think more research is needed. Rebecca Edelmayer, the senior director of scientific engagement for the Alzheimer's Association, noted that the most recent study of the Tsimané's brains did not assess their memory or thinking skills. Nor did it take into account factors like environmental exposure or genes, which can affect brain aging and dementia.

Nevertheless, the study seems to prove something fairly basic — eating well and moving often can lead to better health.

"The findings suggest ample opportunities for interventions to improve brain health," noted Kaplan. "Even in populations with high levels of inflammation."

And a world away from the Bolivian Amazon, in Chicago, researchers are working on a clinical trial to see if factors like diet and exercise can slow mental decline in older adults. They're encouraged by what they see in the Tsimané.

Shannon Halloway, an assistant professor involved in the Chicago study, says that it might not take much for people in Western populations to reset their habits — and hopefully improve their brain health.

"Take walks and talk to your neighbors while you're at it," she said. "Make dinner with your loved ones. Find activities you enjoy and will keep up."





 

More From General Chat Room Archives


Amazon reverses ban on book helping parents rescue kids from transgenderism after pushback
Amazon reverses ban on book helping parents rescue kids from transgenderism after pushback
Posted on Thu, April 15, 2021 12:33pm


With no notification given, Amazon banned a new book aimed at helping parents sever the influences of gender ideology and then reversed its decision in its latest move against voices that scrutinize transgenderism.

The online retail giant blocked the book Desist, Detrans, & Detox: Getting Your...More
Questions remain centuries after disappearance of England's first colony on Roanoke
Questions remain centuries after disappearance of England's first colony on Roanoke
Posted on Mon, May 24, 2021 1:02pm


The site of the first English colony in America sits largely overshadowed by the famed beaches on the barrier islands that form North Carolina's Outer Banks.

In some ways this is fitting, given that the colony on Roanoke Island explored in 1584 and later settled first in 1585 and then again in...More



 



For enquiries, notifications and ad placement send mail to [email protected]
Copyright 2012 - 2024 All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy || Terms & Conditions