Monday 16 December 2013

The Hidden Benefit of Regular Exercise



Here’s another plus of breaking a regular sweat: Working out makes your brain desire fatty, high-calorie foods even less, reports new research from Harvard Medical School.

Researchers found that compared to people who never exercised, regular gym rats had less reaction to high-calorie meals in brain regions connected with food rewards. People who worked out also rated these foods lower on a desirability scale—particularly ones with savory flavors like cheeseburgers and fries.

It’s a double-dose: With regular exercise, you burn calories and change the way your brain reacts to certain foods, says study author William Killgore, Ph.D. It could be that exercise enhances sensitivity to leptin—a protein in fat cells that controls appetite and sends signals to your brain to tell you when you’re full. Or it could be that because you often feel better after a workout, exercise acts as its own mental reward making you less likely to need a high-calorie snack to munch on and lift your mood, says Killgore.





















Brian Dalek

4 comments:

  1. I have to start hitting the gym from tomorrow. Need to get these benefits as well.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I noticed that already. When u exercise regularly you just desire healthy food & drinks.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Oh mehn! I have to go back to my regular exercises.

    ReplyDelete