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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
20 pages in length. The natural course of aging takes its toll on both the body and mind; as much significant progress medical technology has made, there are still some aspects of human existence it cannot stop or reverse. Multimodal exercise has long been a highly recommended component of the geriatric health protocol as a method by which to tone muscles, strengthen bones stronger and keep all the bodily systems in good function. Why is it, therefore, that exercise is only just recently being associated with the delay onset of dementia when it has such dramatically positive impact upon the rest of the physiological makeup? Second only to the skin, the human brain is the largest organ in the body that responds to stimuli no differently than others, however, it is also vastly complex when compared to the liver or heart; because medical science still has a very long way to go before the mind's holistic function and capacity is known, new realizations of the mind/body connection will continue to be made, not the least of which includes the growing association between physical activity and staving off dementia. Bibliography lists 19 sources.
Page Count:
20 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCexerdemen.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
aspects of human existence it cannot stop or reverse. Multimodal exercise has long been a highly recommended component of the geriatric health protocol as a method by which to
tone muscles, strengthen bones stronger and keep all the bodily systems in good function. Why is it, therefore, that exercise is only just recently being associated with the delay
onset of dementia when it has such dramatically positive impact upon the rest of the physiological makeup? Second only to the skin, the human brain is the largest organ
in the body and responds to stimuli no differently than others, however, it is also vastly complex when compared to other organs (Phillips, 2008); because medical science still has a
very long way to go before the minds holistic function and capacity is known, new realizations of the mind/body connection will continue to be made, not the least of which
includes the growing association between physical activity and staving off dementia. II. INTEGRATION AND SYNTHESIS The medical community has enthusiastically embraced the potentially preventive association between exercise and delayed
onset of dementia in Alzheimers patients to such a degree that some doctors have incorporated the recommendation of physical exercise in their geriatric protocol. Rosenberg et al (2005) and
Larson et al (2006) detail the pursuit toward getting the elderly population in step with being more active as a way to curb dementia onset by outlining an exercise program
that entails thrice-weekly walking along with other types of moderate activity. Because psychomotor movement requires mental attention, actions like dancing also qualify as appropriate exercises that stimulate cognitive function
(Rosenberg et al, 2005). Population-based research has indicated how people who engage in an exercise program no less than three times a week demonstrate considerably less risk of dementia
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