Harvard scientists have proof yoga, meditation work
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Sudhir-Architect
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Nov 29, 2013, 8:32:45 PM11/29/13
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It took 7000Yr for modern scientists to discover this............................. If
an Indian talk of the same facts, it is called MYTH & superstition.
If west translates & copies our facts & gives it back in
English…………. Foolish bootlicking Indians & media will fall on their
feet & hail their discovery……… Harvard scientists have proof yoga, meditation workScientists are getting close to proving what yogis have held to be true for centuries — yoga and meditation can ward off stress and disease.
John Denninger, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical School, is leading a five-year study
on how the ancient practices affect genes and brain activity in the
chronically stressed. His latest work follows a study he and others
published earlier this year showing how so-called mind-body techniques can switch on and off some genes linked to stress and immune function.
While hundreds of studies have been conducted on the mental health
benefits of yoga and meditation, they have tended to rely on blunt tools
like participant questionnaires, as well as heart rate and blood
pressure monitoring . Only recently have neuro-imaging and genomics
technology used in Denninger's latest studies allowed scientists to
measure physiological changes in greater detail.
"There is a
true biological effect," said Denninger, director of research at the
Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital,
one of Harvard Medical School's teaching hospitals. "The kinds of
things that happen when you meditate do have effects throughout the
body, not just in the brain."
The government-funded study may
persuade more doctors to try an alternative route for tackling the
source of a myriad of modern ailments. Stressinduced conditions can
include everything from hypertension and infertility to depression and
even the aging process. They account for 60 to 90% of doctor's visits in
the US, according to the Benson-Henry Institute. The World Health
Organization estimates stress costs US companies at least $300 billion a
year through absenteeism, turn-over and low productivity.
Denninger's study, to conclude in 2015 with about $3.3 million in
funding from the National Institutes of Health, tracks 210 healthy
subjects with high levels of reported chronic stress for six months.
Unlike earlier studies, this one is the first to focus on participants
with high levels of stress. The study published in May in the medical
journal PloS One showed that one session of relaxation-response practice
was enough to enhance the expression of genes involved in energy
metabolism and insulin secretion and reduce expression of genes linked
to inflammatory response and stress. There was an effect even among
novices who had never practised before.
In a study published
last year, scientists at the University of California at Los Angeles and
Nobel Prize winner Elizabeth Blackburn found that 12 minutes of daily
yoga meditation for eight weeks increased telomerase activity by 43
percent, suggesting an improvement in stress-induced aging.