Fit & Toned Body

fit & toned bodyLet us all remember that obesity is a disease and feeling blameful or shameful is not going to help one come out of it. Eating foods that are high in calories or gorging away on junk foods raises ones risk of becoming obese and it is really quite stressful to live with it. If you do not burn calories to the extent that you consume them, you are bound to put on weight. Towards this, you may experience low levels of confidence and sometimes you may even feel hopelessly depressed. Thus, according to a health expert, people need to look at weight loss holistically to combine a well-planned diet with an exercise regime and they should stick to it for a fit and toned body. Additionally, talk to your doctor for more information on healthy weight loss.

Exposure To Babies Triggers Maternal Instinct

exposure to babies triggers maternal instinct_Exposure to babies can trigger maternal instincts among women, says a study. Researchers from Tufts University Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine exposed virgin or nulliparous rats to foster pups daily until they began to exhibit maternal behaviour.

The behaviour included crouching over the young, grouping them, or retrieving them back to the nest. The study also showed that such female rats have an increased number of new neurons (nerve cells).

Researchers Miyako Furuta and Robert Bridges from Tufts conducted the study.

Previous research has found that exposure to young can stimulate maternal behaviour not only in rats, but also in mice, hamsters, monkeys, and even humans.

Increased creation of new neurons or neurogenesis, has also been shown during pregnancy and lactation in rodents and associated with maternal behaviour.

However, studies analysing neurogenesis in virgin animals exhibiting maternal behaviour had not been done.

The area of the brain that was the focus of the present study was the region involved in the production of cells that affect odour recognition and possibly recognition of young.

Bridges and Furuta found increased numbers of new neurons in this zone in adult, nulliparous rats that behaved maternally, compared with numbers in subjects that either were not exposed to young or exposed to young, but did not behave maternally.

What stimulates increased new neuron production in such virgin mothers is not known.

One possibility is that the hormone prolactin, which stimulates both the onset of maternal behaviour as well as production of neurons during pregnancy, may play a role in the production of new neurons, says a Tufts release.

A second possibility is that stimulation received from the young themselves may, in fact, play a crucial role in stimulating maternal neuron production.

“These are the questions we hope to answer,” says Bridges. These findings were published in Brain Research Bulletin. Zeenews