Split-image illustration depicting fit muscular body with youthful brain scan versus high visceral fat body with aged brain, symbolizing study findings on body composition and brain health.
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More Muscle, Less Visceral Fat Linked to Younger-Looking Brains

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A new imaging study suggests that higher muscle mass and a lower ratio of visceral fat to muscle are associated with a younger biological brain age. Presented at the Radiological Society of North America’s annual meeting, the research highlights how body composition may influence brain health and future risk of diseases such as Alzheimer’s.

Researchers have identified a body profile that appears to support brain youthfulness: greater muscle mass alongside a lower amount of visceral fat relative to that muscle. Visceral fat, stored deep in the abdomen around internal organs, was associated with faster brain aging, while muscle mass was linked to a protective effect, according to findings presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).(sciencedaily.com)

The study evaluated 1,164 healthy adults from four research sites, 52% of whom were women, with a mean chronological age of 55.17 years. Participants underwent whole-body MRI, including T1‑weighted sequences that helped distinguish fat, muscle and brain tissue. An artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm was used to quantify total normalized muscle volume, visceral fat (hidden belly fat), subcutaneous fat (fat under the skin) and to estimate brain age from structural brain images.(sciencedaily.com)

The data showed that a higher visceral fat‑to‑muscle ratio was associated with an older predicted brain age, whereas subcutaneous fat showed no significant association with how old the brain appeared.(sciencedaily.com) "The participants with more muscle tended to have younger-looking brains, while those with more hidden belly fat relative to their muscle had older-looking brains," said senior author Cyrus Raji, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of radiology and neurology at Washington University School of Medicine’s Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology in St. Louis, in an RSNA news release.(rsna.org)

"Healthier bodies with more muscle mass and less hidden belly fat are more likely to have healthier, youthful brains," Dr. Raji added. "Better brain health, in turn, lowers the risk for future brain diseases, such as Alzheimer's."(sciencedaily.com) The study underscores the close connection between physical and brain health and suggests that improving muscle mass while reducing visceral fat are realistic and potentially beneficial goals, though the research is ongoing and has not yet undergone peer review.

The findings also intersect with the growing use of glucagon-like peptide‑1 (GLP‑1) weight loss drugs such as Ozempic and similar medications, which can reduce body fat but may also contribute to muscle loss. According to the RSNA press materials, the researchers say the results could inform the design of future therapies that more selectively target visceral fat while minimizing muscle loss. "Losing fat—especially visceral fat—while preserving muscle volume would have the best benefit on brain aging and brain health based on insights from our work," Dr. Raji said.(rsna.org) In the future, whole‑body MRI and AI‑based brain‑age estimates could serve as tools to monitor how well such interventions are preserving muscle and reducing harmful visceral fat.

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Reactions on X to the RSNA study emphasize that higher muscle mass and lower visceral fat are associated with younger brain age, reinforcing resistance training for brain health and longevity. Experts explain mechanisms like reduced inflammation, while skeptics question causation versus correlation. High-engagement shares from physicians and news accounts highlight implications for Alzheimer's prevention.

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Illustration showing 'skinny fat' and high pancreatic fat patterns linked to accelerated brain aging in MRI scans.
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Study links two hidden body-fat patterns to faster brain aging

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Where fat is stored in the body—not only how much—is linked to brain structure and cognition, according to a large MRI study of nearly 26,000 UK Biobank participants. Researchers reported that two fat distribution profiles—one marked by high pancreatic fat and another often described as “skinny fat,” with high fat relative to muscle despite a less-obese appearance—were associated with gray-matter loss, faster brain aging and poorer cognitive outcomes.

A randomized clinical trial suggests that a year of guideline-level aerobic exercise was associated with small but measurable reductions in an MRI-based estimate of “brain age,” leaving participants’ brains looking close to one year younger than those of a usual-care control group.

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Researchers at the University of Florida report that lifestyle factors such as optimism, good-quality sleep and strong social support are linked to brains that appear as much as eight years younger than expected for a person’s age. The effect was observed even among adults living with chronic pain, underscoring how everyday behaviors may influence brain health over time.

A new genetic study indicates that obesity and high blood pressure directly contribute to dementia, beyond merely raising its risk. Researchers from Denmark and the U.K. used advanced methods to establish this causal link, emphasizing prevention through weight and blood pressure management. The findings suggest early interventions could avert vascular-related dementia.

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New research indicates that poor sleep quality can make the brain age faster than the body, potentially increasing risks for conditions like dementia. Scientists suggest chronic inflammation from inadequate sleep plays a key role in this process. This finding clarifies a long-standing uncertainty about whether bad sleep causes cognitive decline or merely signals it.

A large genetic study has found that sharp rises in blood sugar after meals could significantly heighten the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. Researchers from the University of Liverpool analyzed data from over 350,000 UK Biobank participants, revealing a 69% increased risk linked to postprandial hyperglycemia. The effect appears independent of visible brain damage, pointing to subtler biological mechanisms.

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A long-term analysis of more than 200,000 UK Biobank participants found that diets with lower glycemic index values were associated with a lower risk of dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia, while higher dietary glycemic load was tied to a higher risk.

 

 

 

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