Short-term isolation effects on the brain, cognitive performance, and sleep—The role of exercise

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Abstract

Isolation is stressful and negatively affects sleep and mood and might also affect the structure and function of the brain. Physical exercise improves brain function. We investigated the influence of physical exercise during isolation on sleep, affect, and neurobehavioral function. N = 16 were isolated for 30 days with daily exercise routines (ISO100) and n = 16 isolated for 45 days with every second day exercise (ISO50). N = 27 were non-isolated controls who either exercised on a daily basis (CTRLEx) or refused exercise (CTRLNonEx) for 30 days. At the beginning and the end of each intervention, intravenous morning cortisol, melatonin, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and IGF-1, positive and negative affect scales, electroencephalography, cognitive function, and sleep patterns (actigraphy) were assessed. High levels of cortisol were observed for the isolated groups (p

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Klein, T., Braunsmann, L., Koschate, J., Hoffmann, U., Foitschik, T., Krieger, S., … Abeln, V. (2023). Short-term isolation effects on the brain, cognitive performance, and sleep—The role of exercise. Frontiers in Physiology, 14. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2023.903072

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