How exercise can help you build resilience at any age
Intentionally stressing our bodies through
exercise can make us more resilient to a variety of stressors
By Kelyn Soong, Washington Post
February 3, 2023 at 2:28 p.m. EST
Stress surrounds us every day in
subtle and substantial ways. Although we can’t eliminate stress from daily
life, research shows that by intentionally stressing our bodies through
exercise, we can change how we respond to stress and boost our resilience.
Resilience is the ability to bounce back from adversity — a
career setback, a relationship breakup or any of the big and small
disappointments of daily life — and grow from the experience so that we handle
difficult situations even better the next time. Much of the research on
resilience focuses on building the skill in childhood, but resilience can be
strengthened at any age.
Resilience is essentially an emotional muscle, but a growing
body of research shows that stressing our physical muscles by exercise is one
way to increase our capacity to cope with daily stress.
Three times a week for eight weeks, the exercising volunteers pedaled, jogged
or stair-climbed at a gym, their workouts focusing on prolonged, moderate
intensity sessions on some days and shorter, high-intensity intervals on
others. Intensity was based on heart rate relative to each person. The sessions
progressively lengthened, from 30 minutes at the start of the study to 50
minutes by the end.
The goal of the study was to test whether regular exercise improved the
individual’s response to stress, so the researchers had to come up with a way
to re-create stress. They settled on a physiological stressor, inflating a
blood pressure cuff to restrict blood flow in the forearm, which is considered a
mild stressor mimicking what happens during a heart attack. Blood tests
measuring the oxidative stress response followed.
At the end of the study, not surprisingly, the exercisers had improved their
fitness, including a 15 percent gain, on average, in their aerobic capacity.
“This is just an eight-week, not a very long exercise intervention,”
Traustadóttir said. “And we were able to show differences that after the
exercise training, there was less of an oxidative stress.”
Traustadóttir also found that those in the exercise group had less oxidative
stress than those in the control group who were not exercising. And the more a
person had improved their fitness, the lower the stress response, whatever
someone’s age.
Why
exercise can boost resilience
The study suggested that for the running
mice, exercise had increased galanin levels and helped them become more
resilient.
Exercise “has profound effects on the way that your brain functions and how the
neurons function,” said David Weinshenker, a professor of human
genetics at Emory University and the senior author of the study. “It can
actually change the neurochemistry in your brain and promote general brain
health.”
Even
walking can change the brain
“That really just means changeability, literally a building of connections in
the brain,” he said. “And one thing that we found that exercise does is it
promotes these connections in the prefrontal cortex, which is a critical area
for emotion regulation.”
“We want to experience manageable stressors so that we can develop stress
resilience and not react with a big stress response every time something
unexpected happens,” said Elissa Epel, a professor
of psychiatry at the University of California at San Francisco and the author
of “The Stress Prescription: Seven Days to More Joy and Ease.” “Our body not
only can handle acute stress but loves it, and expects it when it’s short-term
and manageable.”
The amount and intensity of exercise needed to improve
stress resilience depends on the person, according to Tinna Traustadóttir, an
associate professor of biological sciences at Northern Arizona University and
the senior author of a 2021 study on the
effects of exercise training on physiological stress resilience in adults.
In the study, the researchers randomly assigned 40 sedentary
women and men, about half of them young adults and the rest aged 60 and older,
to either eight-weeks of aerobic exercise training or a non-exercise control
group.
One of Traustadóttir’s takeaways is that to build
resilience, it’s not so much about what particular exercises are done, but
doing them consistently.
“It’s whatever people will enjoy and will therefore do on a
regular basis,” she said.
Studies of stressed-out mice offer clues to why exercise can
help us cope better with stress and become more resilient.
In one series of experiments,
researchers at Emory University studied the stress response in mice, some of
which were allowed to run to their heart’s content on exercise wheels while
others were kept inactive.
After three weeks, the scientists checked for markers of a
brain chemical called galanin, which is known to increase with exercise and is
associated with mental health. (People with variants in galanin-related genes
are at higher risk for depression and anxiety disorders.)
As expected, the running mice showed higher levels of galanin.
In fact, the more a mouse had run, the more of the brain chemical it had.
To induce stress, the researchers subjected the mice to mild
shocks on their paws. All the mice were stressed by the experience, but the
running mice bounced back sooner, returning to normal mouse behavior.
Meanwhile, the non-running rodents continued to cower, still overwhelmed by
stress.
Philip Holmes, a professor of neuroscience at the University of Georgia, defines stress resilience as the “ability to adapt to stress in a way that’s not deleterious.”
Part of his research deals with the neurobiological
mechanisms responsible for stress resilience and the neurobiological effects of
exercise. The most significant impact that exercise has on brain function is to
promote neuroplasticity, Holmes said.
Holmes’s research on rats and mice shows that even moderate
exercise can activate the locus coeruleus, a small brainstem nucleus that is
important for attention, arousal, motivation and cognitive function.
The exercise Holmes studied in rodents is analogous to brisk
walking by humans. The locus coeruleus neurons make substances called trophic
factors, which promote the building of neural circuits. The stress-resilient
parts of the brain get better, healthier circuits while activated, Holmes said.
“So, every time we walk around the neighborhood, you’re
making more of these trophic factors, building more of these circuits,” he
said. “It may just be a little bit, but that will be beneficial.”
Weinshenker agrees that moderate exercise can change the
neurochemistry in our brains and says any aerobic exercise that gets your heart
rate up can be beneficial for stress resilience.
“It doesn’t even have to be vigorous exercise. It could be
something just as simple as walking for 20 or 30 minutes a day,” he said. “It
could be walking, running, biking, swimming. People play a lot of pickleball now.”
Epel calls the short, concentrated bursts of acute stress to
our bodies, such as the stress we experience during exercise, “hormetic
stress.”
The term hormetic, she explains in her book, refers to
“something that in a larger dose would be harmful, but in a smaller dose is
quite beneficial.”
“Hormetic stress works almost like a vaccine,” Epel writes. “You receive a micro-dose of the ‘virus’ (stress), and then, later, when you face a large, intense similar stressor, you’re essentially inoculated against it.”
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