A study conducted at Guangzhou Sport University has found that four weeks of low-intensity treadmill exercise prior to an ischaemic stroke significantly reduced brain injury and improved neurological outcomes in a mouse model, suggesting that regular gentle physical activity may help precondition the brain against future stroke damage.
Published in Translational Exercise Biomedicine, the research used a transient middle cerebral artery occlusion model to simulate ischaemic stroke in mice. Animals that underwent low-intensity treadmill running, ten metres per minute for one hour daily, five days a week, for four weeks before stroke induction showed markedly smaller infarct size at 24 hours compared to non-exercised controls.
Exercised mice also demonstrated higher density of new blood vessels in affected brain tissue, reduced neuronal cell death, and significantly lower expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines, including IL-6, CCL2, and CXCL1. The authors suggest that exercise preconditioning acts through multiple protective mechanisms simultaneously, suppressing inflammation and apoptosis whilst promoting vascular repair.
The findings are of particular relevance to older adults and those with physical limitations, as the exercise protocol used was deliberately accessible rather than strenuous. The researchers propose that encouraging regular, manageable physical activity, such as brisk walking, could represent a low-cost, non-pharmacological preventive strategy against ischemic stroke at a population level.
The study’s limitations include exclusive use of young male mice; validation in female and aged models is required. Protein-level confirmation of the observed inflammatory pathway changes is also needed before mechanistic conclusions can be drawn.
Published in: Translational Exercise Biomedicine