Dramatically effective natural treatment found for stroke-caused brain damage
(NaturalNews) Research findings just announced at the
Canadian Stroke Congress provide
hopeful news for stroke victims. A treatment has been documented that
can improve memory, language, thinking and judgment problems by almost
50 percent -- all within about six months after a person suffers a
stroke. The therapy isn't a new Big Pharma drug or surgical treatment.
Instead, it is simply
consistent exercise that triggers healing in the brain.
41 patients, of whom 70 percent had mild to moderate walking problems
requiring a cane or walker, took part in a five-day-a-week aerobic and
strength/resistance training program that was adapted to their physical
limitations. The workouts included walking, lifting weights and doing
squats and were designed to imitate activities most healthy people would
do in daily life. The results? At the conclusion of the program, the
researchers found "significant improvements" in overall brain function
in the participants. Attention, concentration, planning and organizing
improved the most. Muscle strength and walking ability improved
dramatically, too.
Not only does exercise dramatically improve
cognitive abilities following a stroke but it could also save the lives
of many stroke victims. In a media statement, lead researcher Susan
Marzolini of the
Toronto Rehabilitation Institute pointed out
that people who have cognitive deficits after strokes have a threefold
risk of dying. They are also far more likely to be institutionalized.
"If
we can improve cognition through exercise, which also has many physical
benefits, then this should become a standard of care for people
following
stroke,"
Marzolini stated. "These results provide compelling evidence that by
improving cardiovascular fitness through aerobic exercise and increasing
muscle mass with resistance training, people with stroke can improve
brain health."
Exercising
to improve physical and mental status after a stroke may not sound like
a new idea but it is actually an approach to rehabilitation that is too
often ignored. So Marzolini is urging the medical community to give
people with stroke-related impairments access to exercise programs.
"Modified exercise programs are desperately needed -- they can be
adapted for people following stroke, and we think they can provide huge
health benefits," she emphasized.
In addition, people who have
never had a stroke can up their odds of staying stroke-free by
exercising. "Healthy living is important for reducing your risk for
stroke, recovering from stroke and preventing another," Ian Joiner,
director of stroke for the
Heart and Stroke Foundation, noted in a
press statement about the new study. "All of us should manage our risk
factors for stroke and, when needed, have access to information and
counseling about strategies to modify our lifestyle choices."
"These
healthy lifestyle studies emphasize how important it is to exercise and
stay active after stroke," Dr. Mark Bayley, Co-Chair of the
Canadian Stroke Congress and Medical Director of the Neurological Rehabilitation Program at
Toronto Rehab, stated. "By doing so, we can increase our chances of a better outcome after stroke."
As
Natural News has
previously reported, the 600-year-old form of exercise known as tai chi
has also been found to provide significant benefits to stroke patients.
Specifically, researchers from the
University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) found tai chi to be an effective, drug-free way to treat stroke-caused balance problems.
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/037392_brain_damage_strokes_natural_treatment.html