Lonliness and exercise

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Well - Tara Parker-Pope on Health
February 9, 2011, 12:01 am
Phys Ed: Does Loneliness Reduce the Benefits of Exercise?
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
Luke White

With Valentine’s Day around the corner, this seems the proper moment to ask whether being in a relationship changes how you exercise and, perhaps even more intriguing, whether relationships affect how exercise changes you?

That latter possibility was memorably raised in an elegant series of experiments conducted not long ago at Princeton University. The researchers were trying to replicate earlier work in which the brains of mice given free access to running wheels subsequently fizzed with new brain cells, a process known as neurogenesis, and the mice performed better on rodent intelligence tests than those without access to wheels. To the Princeton researchers’ surprise, when they performed the same study with rats, “which are a little closer, physiologically, to humans,” said Alexis Stranahan, the lead author of the Princeton study, running did not lead to neurogenesis. The rats’ brains remained resolutely unaffected by exercise.

Hoping to discover why, the researchers examined how the rats and mice had been housed and learned that while the mice in the earlier experiments had lived in groups, the rats were kept in single-occupancy cages. Rats, in the wild, are gregarious. They like to be together. The researchers wondered whether isolation could somehow be undermining the cerebral benefits of exercise at a cellular level.

Putting this idea to the test, they divided young male rats into groups housed either in threes or singly and, after a week, gave half of them access to running wheels. All of these rats ran, but only the rats with cagemates experienced rapid and robust neurogenesis. Not until after weeks of running, long after the other socially engaged rats’ brains had sprouted plentiful new neurons and neural connections, did the lone rats start to produce brain cells. Social isolation had dramatically suppressed and slowed the process.
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A recent follow-up experiment by scientists at the University of Houston produced similar results in female rats, which are even more sociable than males. Housed alone, the distaff rats experienced significantly less neurogenesis than female rodents with roommates, even though both groups ran similar distances on their wheels.

Why and how isolation affects exercise and neurogenesis remain somewhat mysterious, said Ms. Stranahan, now an assistant professor at Georgia Health Sciences University. But part of the cause almost certainly involves an excess of tension. “Exercise is a form of stress,” she pointed out. So is social isolation. Each, independently, induces the release of stress hormones (primarily corticosterone in rodents and cortisol in people). These hormones have been found, in multiple studies, to reduce neurogenesis. Except after exercise; then, despite increased levels of the hormones, neurogenesis booms. It’s possible, Ms. Stranahan said, that social connections provide a physiological buffer, a calming, that helps neurogenesis to proceed despite the stressful nature of exercise. Social isolation removes that protection and simultaneously pumps more stress hormones into the system, blunting exercise’s positive effects on brainpower.

Does this happen in lonely human exercisers? No one knows, Ms. Stranahan said, since comparable experiments on people are impossible. (The animals were sacrificed.) But she added, “There is abundant epidemiological literature in people that loneliness has cognitive consequences, contributing to depression, strokes, Alzheimer’s and so on.”

At the same time, on the other hand, new science suggests that, at least in people, close relationships may, in some instances, reduce how fit someone is. For a study published online in December, researchers cross-correlated data about the cardiovascular fitness and relationship status of 8,871 adults who had been tested several times over the years at the Cooper Clinic in Dallas. They found that single women who remained single also retained most of their fitness, while those who married tended to become less fit. Meanwhile, men who divorced became fitter; men who remarried often let themselves go. The authors speculated that divergent worries about appearance and desirability could have been motivating single people to work out and married couples to slack off. (No data was included about those insidious destroyers of workouts, children.)

Taken together, these otherwise varying studies of rodents and humans suggest that while exercise may seems a simple physical activity engaged in by individuals, it is not. It is in fact a behavior plaited with social and emotional concerns that can influence how often you work out and with what physiological consequences. “It may take longer” for lonely people to improve the state of their brains with exercise, Ms. Stranahan said, just as it may take a divorce to get some men in shape. But thankfully, there are some aspects of exercise and interpersonal relationships that remain stubbornly unambiguous. In a 2010 study from the Neuroscience Institute at Princeton, male rats given access to “sexually receptive” females enthusiastically engaged in procreative activity, a moderate workout in its own right and, despite raising their stress hormones, vigorously pumped up the amount of neurogenesis in their brains. Sex improved their ability to think, obvious jokes notwithstanding.

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February 9, 2011
Apps to Share Your Pride at the Gym
By OWEN THOMAS

About four years ago, when I started working at home, I plugged into a laptop to write about Silicon Valley. I made thousands of new friends on Facebook and Twitter, and, thanks to the proximity of my refrigerator, put an additional 35 pounds on an already rotund body.

With so many people anxious to hear the most trivial updates on my life, could I use the friends I added to shed the weight I gained? Eighty-three pounds lighter, I’d say yes.

For 315 days straight, I logged into a Web site or popped out my phone and confessed what I ate, how much I exercised and what I weighed. When I went to the gym, I also checked in on Foursquare, announcing my location to friends and eventually winning the rank of “mayor” of my local gym. When I completed my food and exercise diary, the computer informed my Facebook friends; when I lost weight, it broadcast the news to the world on Twitter.

This sort of oversharing drives some people crazy. EE Times, a publication for engineers, once asked its readers why they disliked Twitter. More than half cited this reason: “I don’t really care what you had for breakfast.”

Yet in my experience, a small set of friends turned out to be intensely interested in what I had for breakfast. And lunch. And dinner. Moreover, they wanted to know whether that added up to my caloric target for the day.

And it seems their sustained obsession with my obsession has helped me stay on track. Since last March, when I first got an iPhone, downloaded a host of helpful apps and hooked them up to my Twitter and Facebook accounts, I’ve lost 63 pounds. In the year before, when I dieted and exercised in digital isolation, recording my calories in and out in a so-last-century Moleskine notebook, I lost only 20 pounds.

It’s a limited experiment, without a control set. But Mike and Albert Lee, the developers of MyFitnessPal, the calorie-tracking app I depend upon, say I’m not an isolated case.

By analyzing a sample of 500,000 users’ recorded weights, and tracking that against how many friends they had on the service, the Lees (who are brothers) found that the more friends people had, the more weight they lost. People who added friends on MyFitnessPal, giving them access to their calorie counts, lost 50 percent more weight than the typical user, they say. People with at least 10 friends lost an average of 20.5 pounds.

Other apps and Web sites that can assist you in losing weight or in sticking to an exercise plan with the help of your friends include DailyBurn, Gain Fitness, LoseIt and Social Workout. I depended mostly on MyFitnessPal, which has fine-tuned controls for broadcasting updates and sharing food diaries.

I post my exercise calories and announce the completion of my daily food diary on Facebook, while limiting Twitter posts to weight-loss milestones. I share the details only with other MyFitnessPal users, taking those engineers at their word that they don’t care what I had for breakfast. Other users make their food intake completely public, or use Twitter to announce they’ve completed their daily diaries.

The responses have varied from heartwarming to hilarious. In response to a 1,000-calorie exercise binge posted on Facebook, my friend Jennifer cracked that she “burned 20 calories going through photos.” Another friend, formerly quite athletic, confided to me privately that he’d put on weight but had been inspired to do something about it by my updates. He’s since dropped four pounds.

About a half-dozen acquaintances have signed up to be friends with me on MyFitnessPal, and a handful more periodically comment on my updates with their own jogs, runs or gym workouts.

I’ve also attracted a virtual cheering squad who routinely click “Like” on my Facebook fitness updates, including one friend, Jennie Dal Busco, a corporate lawyer and new mom, who found solace for her limited ability to exercise during her pregnancy through the vicarious viewing of my gym exploits. Now that her daughter has arrived, my friend has taken up jogging with a stroller.

Not everything I do is broadcast on the Internet; I use another iPhone app, GymGoal, to track the details of my workouts. While it’s not equipped for social networking, I do share it in a sense. When my personal trainer asks me how the last week went, I can show him what I did with precision, which makes our sessions more productive.

There are a host of new fitness services starting up that harness social networks. Nick Gammell started Gain Fitness in late December. Mr. Gammell, a former college football player, was never in particularly bad shape, but he struggled to fit exercise into 70-hour workweeks when he became a financial analyst at Google. He’s designing new features into his site, still in beta testing, to let users post public profiles, find exercise partners and share workouts.

Mr. Gammell said the ability to show friends your workouts offers “social proof,” a phenomenon in which people take cues from others’ behavior.

“It’s something I’ve experienced in my own life,” he said. “Once you start working out, and your friends start knowing about it, that’s the biggest factor in their starting to work out.”

I’ve reached my desired weight, so now I need new goals. And that’s where most apps and services fall short.

Foursquare, which offers badges to reward activities as well as check-ins, is no help; I earned its Gym Rat badge for frequent gym attendance in my first month. MyFitnessPal’s broadcasts are geared around losing weight, not maintaining it or adding fitness.

And each new app or Web site adds more time to the routine. MyFitnessPal and Social Workout both let me share my activities on Facebook, as will Gain Fitness, but they don’t integrate with each other or with tracking tools like GymGoal. I’m confident that Mr. Gammell or another clever entrepreneur will solve that technical challenge.

The far more interesting question is how we’ll navigate the changing etiquette of sharing such formerly private details of our lives. Breaking bread together used to be the symbol of an intimate friendship. Will the future require that we disclose how we plan to burn off those carbs?

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