Review highlights exercise as effective treatment for depression and anxiety

A comprehensive review of global research indicates that exercise, particularly aerobic activities, can significantly reduce symptoms of depression and anxiety. The analysis, covering tens of thousands of participants aged 10 to 90, shows exercise often matches or surpasses medication and talk therapy in effectiveness. Benefits were observed across all age groups and sexes, with supervised or group settings providing the greatest improvements.

A large-scale umbrella review and data synthesis, published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, examined the impact of exercise on depression and anxiety. The study synthesized pooled data from randomized controlled trials up to July 2025, focusing on structured physical activities across various intensities, frequencies, and settings.

For depression, the review incorporated 57 pooled analyses from 800 studies involving 57,930 participants aged 10 to 90, all with clinical diagnoses or symptoms but no co-existing conditions. Exercise categories included aerobic (19 analyses), resistance training (8), mind-body practices like yoga and tai chi (16), and mixed programs (39). Results showed a medium-sized reduction in symptoms, with aerobic activities in supervised or group settings yielding the largest benefits.

For anxiety, 24 pooled analyses from 258 studies covered 19,368 participants aged 18 to 67. Interventions were grouped into aerobic (7), resistance (1), mind-body (9), and mixed (13), each demonstrating a small to medium-sized positive effect. Shorter programs up to eight weeks with lower intensity were particularly helpful for anxiety.

The strongest improvements appeared in young adults aged 18 to 30 and postpartum women. Overall, all exercise types performed as well as or better than medication or talking therapies, regardless of age or sex. Depression and anxiety affect up to one in four people worldwide, with higher rates among young people and women.

The researchers noted limitations, including varying definitions of exercise intensity and limited data across all life stages. They concluded: "This meta-meta-analysis provides robust evidence that exercise effectively reduced depression and anxiety symptoms across all age groups, comparable with, or exceeding, traditional pharmacological or psychological interventions."

They emphasized: "Group and supervised formats gave the most substantial benefits, underscoring the importance of social factors in mental health interventions." The findings suggest tailored exercise programs could serve as a cost-effective, accessible first-line intervention, especially where traditional treatments are limited.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

Realistic illustration showing a woman exercising joyfully, equating exercise to therapy and antidepressants for depression relief per Cochrane review.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Exercise can ease depression symptoms about as much as therapy, Cochrane review finds

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI Fact checked

An updated Cochrane review of randomized trials suggests exercise can reduce depressive symptoms compared with no treatment and may perform about as well as psychological therapy. Results were also similar to antidepressants, though the evidence there is less certain, and researchers say larger, higher-quality studies are still needed.

A new Cochrane Library review of dozens of trials confirms that regular exercise can alleviate depression symptoms as effectively as antidepressants or cognitive behavioral therapy. Even light activities like walking may provide significant benefits. Researchers analyzed nearly 5,000 adults with depression, finding moderate reductions in symptoms across various exercise types.

Iniulat ng AI Fact checked

An umbrella review and pooled analysis published in BMJ’s open-access journal RMD Open concludes that exercise therapy—widely promoted as a first-line treatment for osteoarthritis—delivers, at most, small and short-term improvements in pain and function compared with placebo or no treatment, with benefits appearing smaller in larger and longer-term trials.

Researchers at Newcastle University have found that just 10 minutes of intense exercise can release molecules into the bloodstream that promote DNA repair and inhibit bowel cancer cell growth. The study, involving 30 older adults, showed significant genetic changes in cancer cells exposed to post-exercise blood. These findings suggest exercise could inspire new cancer therapies.

Iniulat ng AI

A small clinical trial has found that a single dose of the psychedelic drug dimethyltryptamine (DMT) led to rapid and sustained reductions in depression symptoms when combined with therapy. Participants experienced improvements lasting up to six months, with mild side effects reported. The study highlights potential benefits of short-acting psychedelics for treatment-resistant depression.

Back pain affects hundreds of millions worldwide as one of the most common chronic conditions. Recent research indicates that a specific amount of daily walking can help prevent it. This approach offers a simple way to improve quality of life amid rising medical costs.

Iniulat ng AI Fact checked

Researchers report that reduced ATP signaling in the dorsal hippocampus of male mice, driven by changes in the protein connexin 43, can trigger both depression- and anxiety-like behaviors. The study, published in The Journal of Neuroscience, finds that chronic stress lowers extracellular ATP and connexin 43 levels, that experimentally reducing the protein induces similar behaviors even without stress, and that restoring it in stressed animals improves behavioral signs of distress.

 

 

 

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan