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Catherine de Lange

Brain Power

An essential guide to living better for longer, Brain Power breaks down the science behind brain function and reveals why sleep, exercise, diet and even socializing are so important for our health.
What does it mean to have a healthy, happy brain, and why is it so important to look after our grey matter? Comprehensive and illuminating, this is an essential and up-to-date examination of how lifestyle choices impact our ability to maintain a healthy brain.
Focusing on important areas such as diet, sleep, exercise, brain training and emotions, Brain Power explains the science behind what really affects our brains, as well as providing practical tips and exercises to improve and support brain function into old age.
284 printed pages
Copyright owner
Michael O'Mara Books
Original publication
2022
Publication year
2022
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
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Impressions

  • AYA AYA🌛🌷shared an impression2 months ago
    👍Worth reading

    It's so good 💗🌷✨

  • Diego Sebastán Erraez Erraezshared an impression5 months ago
    👍Worth reading

    👍

  • steriakatebeshared an impression2 months ago

    Yeye😇

Quotes

  • Airina Nabila Abdul Nizanhas quoted9 months ago
    a healthy brain is about feeling good
  • mefop31506has quoted10 hours ago
    The idea of eating lots of plants fits with what we know about the microbiome, and indeed some recent research suggests that the very reason the Mediterranean diet is so good for us is the way it influences our gut microbes.22 People in Okinawa also tend to eat very few calories, even by Japanese standards, a hint that keeping calories low, as we learned in the previous chapter, could be a good strategy for health. The diets of blue-zoners also fits with the recent finding that a poor diet is the leading cause of death in most countries. The biggest culprits? Too much salt, too few whole grains and not enough vegetables. Exactly the opposite of the blue-zone diet.
    Med diet marvel
    Living longer is one thing, but what about the brain? Here, the Mediterranean diet really comes into its own. Studies consistently find that sticking to it reduces the risk for numerous brain conditions including stroke, depression and Alzheimer’s.23 On the other hand, unhealthy diets high in processed foods have been linked to increased risk of depression as well as anxiety.24 Diet and mental health, then, are clearly connected, but most of these studies are observational – meaning that people’s habits are observed and measurements are made, but the scientists aren’t trying to change the outcome – so we can’t definitively say that diet is the driving force.
  • mefop31506has quoted10 hours ago
    indeed some recent research suggests that the very reason the Mediterranean diet is so good for us is the way it influences our gut microbes.22 People in Okinawa also tend to eat very few calories, even by Japanese standards, a hint that keeping calories low, as we learned in the previous chapter, could be a good strategy for health. The diets of blue-zoners also fits with the recent finding that a poor diet is the leading cause of death in most countries. The biggest culprits? Too much salt, too few whole grains and not enough vegetables. Exactly the opposite of the blue-zone diet.
    Med diet marvel
    Living longer is one thing, but what about the brain? Here, the Mediterranean diet really comes into its own. Studies consistently find that sticking to it reduces the risk for numerous brain conditions including stroke, depression and Alzheimer’s.23 On the other hand, unhealthy diets high in processed foods have been linked to increased risk of depression as well as anxiety.24 Diet and mental health, then, are clearly connected, but most of these studies are observational – meaning that people’s habits are observed and measurements are made, but the scientists aren’t trying to change the outcome – so we can’t definitively say that diet is the driving force.

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