This study will explore whether a 21-minute meditation practice called Shambhavi Mahamudra Kriya leads to changes in brain health and explore how it affects cognitive and physiological function.
Meditation has been linked to improved brain health and lower brain age. Brain age has been successfully estimated from structural MRI and more recently, EEG Sleep data using Brain Age Index (BAI) derived by machine learning algorithms. Patients with significant neurological or psychiatric disease exhibit a mean excess BAI of about 4 years. Higher BAI is a predictor of mortality. Long term meditation has been associated with lower Brain Age in MRI studies. However, the EEG sleep measure of Brain Age has not been reported in meditators. This project aims to quantify the progressive impact of meditation on brain age. If established objectively, meditation-based interventions could offer safe, affordable and accessible solutions to promote younger and healthier brains and will have invaluable health and financial implications. The goal of this project is twofold: 1. In alignment with the recent NCCIH emphasis, we propose this study to combine neuroimaging with other non-neural modalities to delineate the impact of meditation on brain health and overall physiology and to identify objective neural biomarkers to assess meditation-based interventions which could be further used in clinical applications. 2. It is estimated that by 2050, an unprecedented 18% of the world's population will be above 65 years of age. According to the National Institute on Aging (NIA), aging is the most significant risk factor of many chronic conditions including age-related neurodegenerative diseases, which severely impact the quality of life, healthcare and social costs. The total healthcare cost of Alzheimer's disease in 2020 was estimated at $305 billion and expected to rise to $1 trillion soon. NIA's 5 year strategy highlights the crucial need to better understand the aging brain and develop interventions to address age-related neurological conditions. The study intervention is a multi-component 21-minute meditation called Shambhavi Mahamudra Kriya. It is taught at the Inner Engineering program offered by non-profit Isha Foundation as online as well as in-person formats. It incorporates a combination of different breathing patterns and meditative components. The intervention training provides precise, step by step and easy to follow instructions on how to perform this practice. Performed in a seated posture, this is a simple, safe and accessible intervention that requires no previous experience of meditation. The intervention selected for this study was shown to significantly reduce perceived stress, enhance self-reported general well-being, improve positive emotions, mindfulness, sleep, engagement, relationships and may promote enhanced Heart Rate Variability and Sympathovagal balance. The control group will be selected to be age, gender and education level matched with the intervention group and will be asked to continue their daily routine.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
80
The intervention is taught at the Inner Engineering program offered by non-profit Isha Foundation as online as well as in-person formats. It incorporates a combination of different breathing patterns and meditative components. The intervention training provides precise, step by step and easy to follow instructions on how to perform this practice. Performed in a seated posture, this is a simple, safe and accessible intervention that requires no previous experience of meditation. The intervention selected for this study was shown to significantly reduce perceived stress, enhance self-reported general well-being, improve positive emotions, mindfulness, sleep, engagement, relationships, and may promote enhanced Heart Rate Variability and Sympathovagal balance.
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITINGChange in Frontal Midline Theta Power after 6 Months of Daily Meditation Practice
Frontal Midline Theta Power is obtained from an average of 8 electrodes (Fpc, Fc, Cz, Pz, Oz, F7, F8, P7, P8) around the midline in a standard EEG cap and has been proposed as a correlate of meditation success in previous studies. Increased value suggests increased control over the brain's default mode network, suggesting more successful meditation experience.
Time frame: Measured at Baseline and 6 months
Change in Gamma Slope Index (GSI) after 6 Months of Daily Meditation
GSI is an indicator of the Excitation-Inhibition (E-I) balance in the brain and is computed from the power spectral density slope of oscillatory activity in the brain, taking the low-gamma (40-60Hz) band slope of the Power Spectral Density, and is steeper (more negative) when the E-I balance is tipped towards more inhibition. A higher negative value suggests shift of the brain's excitation/inhibition balance toward more inhibition, indicating a calmer brain.
Time frame: Measured at Baseline and 6 months
Change in Brain cortical thickness after 6 Months of Daily Meditation Practice
Brain cortical thickness (mm) will be assessed using MRI. Cortical thickness is the width of gray matter in the human cortex. Group-wise comparisons will be made between the intervention group (meditation) and control (no meditation). A positive difference between the intervention (meditation) and control (no meditation) groups indicates greater cortical thickness in the intervention group.
Time frame: Measured at Baseline and 6 Months
Changes in Brain regional volume after 6 Months of Daily Meditation Practice
Brain regional volume (mm\^3) will be assessed using MRI. Brain regional volume is the volume of brain matter. Group-wise comparisons will be made between the intervention group (meditation) and control (no meditation). A positive difference between the intervention (meditation) and control (no meditation) groups indicates greater brain volume in the intervention (meditation) group.
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Time frame: Measured at Baseline and 6 Months
Change in Brain Connectivity after 6 Months of Daily Meditation Practice
fMRI is an indirect measure of brain activity based on blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signals. Based on BOLD signals, functional connectivity will be assessed. Functional connectivity between two regions will be assessed for both the intervention and control group. A t-statistics value will be calculated based on the differences in signal intensities between the two groups. A more positive t-statistic indicates greater brain connectivity in the intervention group (meditation) compared to the control (no meditation).
Time frame: Measured at Baseline and 6 Months