Skip navigation.

... Midlife Improvement

Search LifeTwo:

Get Our Newsletter!

Stay up to date on midlife issues -- subscribe to our monthly email newsletter (you can easily unsubscribe later)!

Email address:

Visit Our Store!

Visit our store at Amazon to see books and other products we recommend -- like this:

Your LifeTwo

In this area, registered users see recommendations, set bookmarks, and track what their buddies are up to. For more on the benefits of registering, go here.

User login

twitter_logo

Follow us on Twitter and get tweets when new posts go up! Click on the Twitter logo to go to our page at Twitter, and then click the "follow" button.

Subscribe in a Reader:

XML feed

Use the icon above to subscribe to LifeTwo's Home Page in a reader like My Yahoo or Google Reader (see this page to learn more about RSS and for information on our other feeds). Or if you use one of the following services, just click on its icon:

Add to Google

Add to My Yahoo!

Add to My AOL


Advertising Supplied By:

New On LifeTwo's Homepage

Recent Discussions

When it comes to chocolate, modern science and the stomach both agree it's good for brain functioning

Wesley's picture

Researchers from The University of Nottingham's School of Physics and Astronomy used advanced MRI technology to determine that consumption of a cocoa drink rich in flavanols — a key ingredient of dark chocolate and certain other foods— boosts blood flow to key areas of the brain for two to three hours.

And that's not all:

The findings, unveiled at one of the biggest scientific conferences in America, also raise the prospect of ingredients in chocolate being used to treat vascular impairment, including dementia and strokes, and thus for maintaining cardiovascular health.

The study also suggests that the cocoa flavanols found in chocolate could be useful in enhancing brain function for people fighting fatigue, sleep deprivation, and even the effects of ageing.

The MRIs showed increased activity in certain areas of the brain after individuals consumed a flavanol-rich cocoa drink. The effect is the result of "dilation of cerebral blood vessels, allowing more blood — and therefore more oxygen — to reach key areas of the brain."

Besides chocolate, flavanols can also be found in red wine, green tea and blueberries.

Source: Science Daily

5
 
 

Post new comment

  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <b> <i> <u> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <p> <hr> <blockquote> <table> <tr> <td> <!--break-->

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question helps prevent automated spam submissions.