247 Calendar

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Chicago Marathon 훈련 일정표(Chicago Marathon Training Calendar)

Sam 선배님,
저희 Chicago Marathon 훈련 일정표(Chicago Marathon Training Calendar)을 저희 blog에 올리고 싶은데 방법이 없을까요?

미영,

Thursday, February 23, 2012

나도야 간안다ㅏㅏ 메이저 로 감사감사

오늘 부터 적극적으로 블러그에 참가함
시카코야 지달려
매일한구절의 성경과 함께
지달려 247 이여

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Exercise Fuels the Brain

February 22, 2012, 12:01 AM

How Exercise Fuels the Brain

Does exercise keep your brain running?Shannon Stapleton/ReutersDoes exercise keep your brain running?
Phys Ed
Moving the body demands a lot from the brain. Exercise activates countless neurons, which generate, receive and interpret repeated, rapid-fire messages from the nervous system, coordinating muscle contractions, vision, balance, organ function and all of the complex interactions of bodily systems that allow you to take one step, then another.
This increase in brain activity naturally increases the brain’s need for nutrients, but until recently, scientists hadn’t fully understood how neurons fuel themselves during exercise. Now a series of animal studies from Japan suggest that the exercising brain has unique methods of keeping itself fueled. What’s more, the finely honed energy balance that occurs in the brain appears to have implications not only for how well the brain functions during exercise, but also for how well our thinking and memory work the rest of the time.
For many years, scientists had believed that the brain, which is a very hungry organ, subsisted only on glucose, or blood sugar, which it absorbed from the passing bloodstream. But about 10 years ago, some neuroscientists found that specialized cells in the brain, known as astrocytes, that act as support cells for neurons actually contained small stores of glycogen, or stored carbohydrates. And glycogen, as it turns out, is critical for the health of cells throughout the brain.
In petri dishes, when neurons, which do not have energy stores of their own, are starved of blood sugar, their neighboring astrocytes undergo a complex physiological process that results in those cells’ stores of glycogen being broken down into a form easily burned by neurons. This substance is released into the space between the cells and the neurons swallow it, maintaining their energy levels.
But while scientists knew that the brain had and could access these energy stores, they had been unable to study when the brain’s stored energy was being used in actual live conditions, outside of petri dishes, because brain glycogen is metabolized or burned away very rapidly after death; it’s gone before it can be measured.
That’s where the Japanese researchers came in. They had developed a new method of using high-powered microwave irradiation to instantly freeze glycogen levels at death, so that the scientists could accurately assess just how much brain glycogen remained in the astrocytes or had recently been used.
In the first of their new experiments, published last year in The Journal of Physiology, scientists at the Laboratory of Biochemistry and Neuroscience at the University of Tsukuba gathered two groups of adult male rats and had one group start a treadmill running program, while the other group sat for the same period of time each day on unmoving treadmills. The researchers’ aim was to determine how much the level of brain glycogen changed during and after exercise.
Using their glycogen detection method, they discovered that prolonged exercise significantly lowered the brain’s stores of energy, and that the losses were especially noticeable in certain areas of the brain, like the frontal cortex and the hippocampus, that are involved in thinking and memory, as well as in the mechanics of moving.
The findings of their subsequent follow-up experiment, however, were even more intriguing and consequential. In that study, which appears in this month’s issue of The Journal of Physiology, the researchers studied animals after a single bout of exercise and also after four weeks of regular, moderate-intensity running.
After the single session on the treadmill, the animals were allowed to rest and feed, and then their brain glycogen levels were studied. The food, it appeared, had gone directly to their heads; their brain levels of glycogen not only had been restored to what they had been before the workout, but had soared past that point, increasing by as much as a 60 percent in the frontal cortex and hippocampus and slightly less in other parts of the brain. The astrocytes had “overcompensated,” resulting in a kind of brain carbo-loading.
The levels, however, had dropped back to normal within about 24 hours.
That was not the case, though, if the animals continued to exercise. In those rats that ran for four weeks, the “supercompensation” became the new normal, with their baseline levels of glycogen showing substantial increases compared with the sedentary animals. The increases were especially notable in, again, those portions of the brain critical to learning and memory formation — the cortex and the hippocampus.
Which is why the findings are potentially so meaningful – and not just for rats.
While a brain with more fuel reserves is potentially a brain that can sustain and direct movement longer, it also “may be a key mechanism underlying exercise-enhanced cognitive function,” says Hideaki Soya, a professor of exercise biochemistry at the University of Tsukuba and senior author of the studies, since supercompensation occurs most strikingly in the parts of the brain that allow us better to think and to remember. As a result, Dr. Soya says, “it is tempting to suggest that increased storage and utility of brain glycogen in the cortex and hippocampus might be involved in the development” of a better, sharper brain.
Given the limits of current technologies, brain glycogen metabolism cannot be studied in people. But even so, the studies’ findings make D.I.Y. brain-fuel supercompensation efforts seem like an attractive possibility. And, according to unpublished data from Dr. Soya’s lab, the process may even be easy.
He and his colleagues have found that “glycogen supercompensation in some brain loci” is “enhanced in rats receiving carbohydrates immediately after exhaustive exercise.” So for people, that might mean that after a run or other exercise that is prolonged or strenuous enough to leave you tired, a bottle of chocolate milk or a banana might be just the thing your brain is needing.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

우리 247에 잠깐 머무셨던 심재일집사님의 아버지가 어제 돌아가셨습니다. 댁이 미시간 입니다.
금요일에 장례식이 참석하고 토요일날 돌아옵니다.
귀국보고는 일요일에 드리겠습니다. ^o^

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

환영 합니다. 두분(K/C)

드뎌 두 회원님들이 장기 출장에서 무사히 돌아 오셨군요 고생 하셨습니다.
근디 여기에는 미영씨가 맹근 훈련 일정표가 없던데 어디로 가면 볼수 있을까요?
샐에만 있능가벼?

Monday, February 6, 2012

Chicago Marathon CLOSED!!!!

Chicago Marathon is now CLOSED!!! It closed in mere SIX days!!! WOW.

Friday, February 3, 2012

이틀만에 230불을 마라톤에 투자(?)한 지나영 입니다.  분위기 좋게 말할때 다들 빨리 등록 하랑께요.  할라니까 마감됐네 어쩌네 하실려고 하시는 분들이 혹 있으시다면 알죠잉~~~. 마이 이뻐 할겨 :).

Chicago Marathon 30,000

Chicago Marathon Registration has surpassed 30,000 as of today!!! 빨리 등록하세요!!!

Thursday, February 2, 2012

마감 임박의 압박

마라톤 등록이 마감될 거란 말을 듣자 마자.. 바로 컴으로 등록을 하고 말았습니다. 홈쇼핑 중독자들은 마감 임박이란 말을 들으면 바로 전화기를 든다고 하던데 이해가 되더군요 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ.

너무 바쁘게 하는 바람에 제 이름을 잘못 적어 등록 했네요.........

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

저도 메이저로 갑니다.

2011 하프와 무명 풀마라톤을 거쳐 드디어 2012 시카고 메이저로 갑니다.

Chicago Marathon

태 여사님 등록 했습니다!!!! Fighting!!!

시카고 마라톤

시카고 마라톤 올해는 앞으로 2-3일 내에
등록이 마감될거라내여,언능 서둘러
등록들 하세요.빨리빨리빨리.....

Chicago Marathon-10/7/2012



Chicago Marathon Registration is now OPEN. I just registered!!!