A cascade of beneficial effects hits the brain during exercise — with new data on strength training. Helping your patients ...
Brain fog is a common side effect of chemotherapy for cancer, with the toxic drug cocktails affecting attention, memory and ...
Exercise may help mitigate cancer treatment side effects, such as brain fog, pain, and fatigue. Image credit: Hernandez & Sorokina/Stocksy. Cancer treatments can cause a host of health problems. For ...
Caring for your brain is a lifelong journey—and new research from the AdventHealth Research Institute offers hopeful news. A simple, steady exercise routine may help your brain stay biologically ...
This study suggests exercise can mitigate cancer-related cognitive impairment, but combining it with ibuprofen offers no ...
Exercise and ibuprofen can help reduce the cognitive side effects that many cancer patients face during chemotherapy. A ...
Can exercise lower cortisol? A randomized clinical trial reveals that a year of aerobic activity reduces stress hormones and ...
Following a simple, guideline-based aerobic workout programme for a year could make the brain “measurably younger”, scientists claim in a new study. Researchers found that regularly following the ...
A year of consistent aerobic activity didn’t just boost fitness; it shifted MRI-based brain age in early to midlife adults, suggesting exercise may help preserve brain health long before old age.
Your brain health and physical fitness may seem like totally different areas of wellness, but new research suggests they’re more closely linked than you’d think. The Journal of Sport and Health ...
The metabolic tug-of-war: Exercise versus ultra-processed diet. Voluntary exercise exerts an antidepressant-like behavioral effect and attenuates metabolic dysregulation in rats fed a cafeteria diet.
How to treat chemo brain? A 2026 Phase II trial reveals that the EXCAP exercise program and low-dose ibuprofen help improve ...