YOGA FOR LONGEVITY
People
often say that yoga rejuvenates them, makes them feel stronger, more flexible,
and maybe even younger than their actual age. And yogis whose practices are
about more than the physical – that is, who get the mental and spiritual
elements of yoga in, too – do seem to have a healthy, youthful glow about them.
But when it comes to aging, can yoga actually make us age more slowly? The
evidence isn’t totally clear, but there may be some ways in which yoga can help
us age better, and even reduce some of the genetic changes that normally come
as we get older.
One of the best methods we have for
measuring aging is telomere length: Telomeres are material at the ends of your
chromosomes, which keep the chromosomes from “unraveling,” like the plastic
tips on the ends of shoelaces. They shorten over a person’s lifespan, and this
shortening is linked with a number of diseases. But there appear to be some
things that we can do to keep them from shortening so quickly. And yoga and/or
meditation may be one.
In fact, one study by the well-known
cardiologist Dean Ornish and colleagues, found that for men who had early-stage
prostate cancer, adding yoga along with other lifestyle changes seemed to
affect telomere length significantly. The researchers had half of the participants
add into their routines yoga, meditation, changes to diet and exercise
routines, stress reduction and social support. The other half of the
participants didn’t make these changes. By the end of the five-year study
period, the men in the first group had significant changes in the length of
their telomeres – they actually became longer over time – and in telomerase,
the enzyme that controls telomere activity. The control group did not enjoy the
same changes. It’s hard to say whether it was the yoga or all of the changes
together that lead to the benefits, but yoga may certainly be a key ingredient.
And here’s another study, from UCLA, which
deepens this possibility. It found that yoga helped people who were caregivers
for a family member with dementia (arguably one of the most stressful jobs
there is) in a number of mental health measures – and, like the earlier study,
in their telomerase activity. The team had participants learn Kirtan Kriya, or
simply listen to relaxing music, for 12 minutes a day for eight weeks. At the
end of this period, the caretakers had improved scores on measures of
depression, overall cognitive functioning, and in their telomerase levels,
compared to the control group.
Finally, very recent work by the same UCLA group found that
Kirtan Kriya also helps people at risk for Alzheimer’s disease. They had
participants with memory problems, but not Alzheimer’s disease, learn Kirtan
Kriya and Kundalini yoga or do various mental exercises that are known to
improve cognition. At the end of 12 weeks, both groups improved in verbal
memory. But people in the Kriya group had larger gains in visual-spatial
memory, and these changes were seen at the level of the brain (on MRI). This
group also had reduced symptoms of depression and anxiety, better resilience to
stress, and improved coping skills.
“Historically and anecdotally, yoga has
been thought to be beneficial in aging well, but this is the scientific
demonstration of that benefit,” says study author Harris Eyre. “We’re
converting historical wisdom into the high level of evidence required for
doctors to recommend therapy to their patients.”
Finally, meditation itself has been shown
to have some incredibly impressive effects on cognitive decline, and even on
the aging brain. A review study in 2014, by a team at Harvard, for
instance, found that meditation can offset the cognitive decline that can come
with age. It may even reduce the loss of brain volume that naturally occurs
over time: Everyone’s brain volume shrinks as they age, but research from Emory University found that for
long-term meditators, their brain shrinkage was considerably less pronounced
than people who didn’t meditate.
It’s too soon to say whether yoga can
really slow or reverse the aging process, or help you live longer. But there’s
some good evidence that it may help some of the issues that we do know are
associated with aging. As far as the other things go – flexibility, strength,
and overall well-being – those you may just have to gauge for yourself.
Source:Yogaglo
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