Guest guest Posted May 25, 2001 Report Share Posted May 25, 2001 ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- Text PAMHO:4317820 (75 lines) [W1] Bir Krishna das Goswami 22-May-01 19:49 GBC Discussions [11081] Watch out! --------------------------- It has been just discovered that continual flying over many time zones shrinks the brain!!! Please look at this web site for information: http://www.nature.com/nsu/010524/010524-3.html Please adjust your schedules accordingly. Here is the text: brain: Jet setting drains brain HELEN PEARSON Too much long haul travel could shrink your brain. © SPL Flying becomes even more dangerous this week. Even if you survive the in-flight food and seat-induced deep vein thrombosis, repeated jet lag without time to recover could shrink bits of your brain, research shows1. Five years of long-haul travel without rest time shrivels parts of the cortex and hippocampus, the thinking and learning parts of the brain, reports Kwangwook Cho of the University of Bristol. Cho, who last year found that female cabin crew suffer poor memory and increased levels of the stress hormone cortisol after repeated long flights2, imaged the brains of 20 air hostesses working for international airline companies. The group that had less than five days to recover when they flew over more than seven time zones showed significant shrinkage compared with those given a full two weeks to recover. The more demanding schedule also cut the women's ability in spatial learning and memory tasks. "It’s tantalizing stuff," says Charalambos Kyriacou, who studies biological rhythms at the University of Leicester, UK. According to Kyriacou, jet lag confuses the master body clock in the brain, the supra-chiasmatic nucleus, which sends out signals — such as boosted cortisol levels — to reset the rest of the body. A withering hippocampus may be the result of disrupted cell division by these signals, he speculates. "Your brain resets quickly but your different organs reset more slowly," Kyriacou says — it’s this that makes us feel lousy. To avert air-hostess brain syndrome, Cho recommends allowing plenty of time to recover after a flight. ---------- ---- Cho, K. Chronic ‘jet lag’ produces temporal lobe atrophy and spatial cogntive deficits. Nature Neuroscience 4, 567–568 (2001). Cho, K., Ennaceur, A. Cole, J.C. & Suh, C.H. Chronic jet lag produces cognitive deficits. Journal of Neuroscience 20, 1–5 (2000). ---------- ---- See also; brain: Flight non-attendants © Macmillan Magazines Ltd 2001 - NATURE NEWS SERVICE ---------- ---- Nature © Macmillan Publishers Ltd 2001 Reg. No. 785998 England. (Text PAMHO:4317820) ------ ------- End of Forwarded Message ------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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