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- Title
Cerebral Blood Flow Effects of Yoga Training: Preliminary Evaluation of 4 Cases.
- Authors
Cohen, Debbie L.; Wintering, Nancy; Tolles, Victoria; Townsend, Raymond R.; Farrar, John T.; Galantino, Mary Lou; Newberg, Andrew B.
- Abstract
Objectives: Experienced practitioners of yoga have been shown to alter brain function, but this case series measured cerebral blood flow before and after a 12-week training program in Iyengar yoga (IY) for naïve subjects. Methods: On the first day, each of the 4 subjects listened to the teacher speaking on the history and background of the yoga program while they were injected with 250 MBq of 99mTc-bicisate and received a single photon emission computed tomography scan (pre-program baseline). Subjects then had their first IY training and were injected and scanned with 925 MBq bicisate while they did their first meditation (pre-program meditation). Subjects then underwent a 12-week training program in IY and then underwent the same imaging protocol with a postprogram baseline and postprogram meditation scan. Baseline and meditation scans, before and after training, were compared using paired t tests. Results: There were significant decreases ( p < 0.05) between the pre- and postprogram baseline scans in the right amygdala, dorsal medial cortex, and sensorimotor area. There was a significant difference ( p < 0.05) in the pre- and postprogram percentage change (i.e., activation) in the right dorsal medial frontal lobe, prefrontal cortex, and right sensorimotor cortex. Conclusions: These initial findings suggest the brain experiences a “training effect” after 12 weeks of IY training.
- Subjects
YOGA; IYENGAR yoga; OCCUPATIONAL training; BLOOD flow; BLOOD circulation; TOMOGRAPHY; PHOTON emission; MEDITATION; FRONTAL lobe
- Publication
Journal of Alternative & Complementary Medicine, 2009, Vol 15, Issue 1, p9
- ISSN
1075-5535
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1089/acm.2008.0008