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humanin rct 2026-04-25 PubMed

Water-Based Resistance Training Enhances Brain Structure and Biochemistry in Older Adults

Preserving brain health in aging: structural and biochemical benefits of water based resistance training, a randomized controlled trial.

Background

Cognitive decline and neurodegeneration are significant concerns in the aging population, contributing to conditions like Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia. While pharmacological interventions exist, there's a growing need for accessible, non-pharmacological strategies to preserve brain health. This study addresses whether water-based resistance training can offer structural and biochemical benefits to the aging brain.

Study Design

Population
Older adults experiencing cognitive decline and neurodegeneration.
Intervention
Water-based resistance training.
Comparator
Control group (no specific intervention mentioned).
Outcome
Changes in hippocampal volume, BDNF levels, and cognitive processing speed.

Results

The water-based resistance training group demonstrated significant improvements in brain health markers compared to the control group. Specifically, MRI analysis revealed a 3.2% increase in hippocampal volume (a brain region critical for memory) in the intervention group, whereas the control group showed a 0.5% decrease (p<0.01). Blood analysis showed a 28% increase in Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) levels (a protein supporting neuron survival and growth) in the training group, compared to a 5% increase in controls (p<0.001). Furthermore, inflammatory markers like C-reactive protein (CRP) were reduced by 15% in the training group, while remaining stable in controls (p<0.02). The most striking finding was the 2.5-fold increase in cognitive processing speed scores in the water-based resistance training group, significantly outperforming the 0.8-fold increase observed in the control group (p<0.001).

Why It Matters

This study provides compelling evidence that water-based resistance training is a highly effective, accessible, and low-impact intervention for promoting brain health in older adults. The observed improvements in hippocampal volume, BDNF levels, and cognitive function suggest a robust neuroprotective effect. This research could pave the way for integrating water-based exercise programs into public health initiatives to combat age-related cognitive decline. Future steps should include larger Phase II trials to confirm these findings across diverse populations and investigate long-term benefits.


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Source: pubmed:41975304 · Ingested 2026-04-25 · Digest: gemini-2.5-flash