Efficacy of Yoga for COVID-19 Stress Prophylaxis.


Journal

Journal of physical activity & health
ISSN: 1543-5474
Titre abrégé: J Phys Act Health
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101189457

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 Nov 2023
Historique:
received: 26 01 2023
revised: 05 05 2023
accepted: 30 05 2023
medline: 8 11 2023
pubmed: 26 8 2023
entrez: 25 8 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The global COVID-19 lockdown restricted daily routines due to the psychological fear of infection, which imposed an unknown universal threat on female college students, affecting physiological health and well-being. However, scant information concerning the efficacy of yogic practice on female college students during the stressful COVID-19 pandemic situation is available. In a randomized controlled trial (n = 74, age = 21.65 [4.05] y), a study was conducted with a well-conceptualized yogic module for 5 days/week for 3 months (40 min daily in the morning) among yogic volunteers. Pre-post analysis of anthropometric, physiological, and biochemical indices in pandemic-stressed female college students was done for the control and yoga groups. After 3 months of yogic practice, significant reduction (P < .05) in heart rate (d = 0.64, meandiff = 5.43), systolic blood pressure (d = 0.59, meandiff = 5.32), cortisol (d = 0.59, meandiff = 6.354), and triglycerides (P < .01, d = 0.45, meandiff = 13.95) was observed. After yogic follow-up significant improvement (P < .01) in high-frequency (d = 0.56, meandiff = -7.3), total power (d = 0.46, meandiff = -1150) and time domain parameters of heart rate variability led to ameliorate the stress index. Superoxide dismutase (P < .01, d = 0.78, meandiff = 0.69), catalase (P < .05, d = 0.48, meandiff = -7.37), glutathione (P < .001, d = 0.83, meandiff = -4.15), high-density lipoprotein (P < .05, d = 0.48, meandiff = -11.07), and dopamine (P < .001, d = 0.97, meandiff = -135.4) values along with inflammatory markers (P < .001) significantly improved among yogic volunteers after regular practice. Our findings suggest that a 3-month well-conceptualized yogic intervention during COVID-19 may be considered as a prophylactic tool to improve female college students' universal psychophysiological health by ameliorating autonomic functions, cardiometabolic risk factors, and immune metabolisms in an economical and environment-friendly manner.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
The global COVID-19 lockdown restricted daily routines due to the psychological fear of infection, which imposed an unknown universal threat on female college students, affecting physiological health and well-being. However, scant information concerning the efficacy of yogic practice on female college students during the stressful COVID-19 pandemic situation is available.
METHODS METHODS
In a randomized controlled trial (n = 74, age = 21.65 [4.05] y), a study was conducted with a well-conceptualized yogic module for 5 days/week for 3 months (40 min daily in the morning) among yogic volunteers. Pre-post analysis of anthropometric, physiological, and biochemical indices in pandemic-stressed female college students was done for the control and yoga groups.
RESULTS RESULTS
After 3 months of yogic practice, significant reduction (P < .05) in heart rate (d = 0.64, meandiff = 5.43), systolic blood pressure (d = 0.59, meandiff = 5.32), cortisol (d = 0.59, meandiff = 6.354), and triglycerides (P < .01, d = 0.45, meandiff = 13.95) was observed. After yogic follow-up significant improvement (P < .01) in high-frequency (d = 0.56, meandiff = -7.3), total power (d = 0.46, meandiff = -1150) and time domain parameters of heart rate variability led to ameliorate the stress index. Superoxide dismutase (P < .01, d = 0.78, meandiff = 0.69), catalase (P < .05, d = 0.48, meandiff = -7.37), glutathione (P < .001, d = 0.83, meandiff = -4.15), high-density lipoprotein (P < .05, d = 0.48, meandiff = -11.07), and dopamine (P < .001, d = 0.97, meandiff = -135.4) values along with inflammatory markers (P < .001) significantly improved among yogic volunteers after regular practice.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Our findings suggest that a 3-month well-conceptualized yogic intervention during COVID-19 may be considered as a prophylactic tool to improve female college students' universal psychophysiological health by ameliorating autonomic functions, cardiometabolic risk factors, and immune metabolisms in an economical and environment-friendly manner.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37625797
doi: 10.1123/jpah.2023-0035
doi:

Types de publication

Randomized Controlled Trial Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1034-1042

Auteurs

Sudeep Mitra (S)

Laboratory of Human Performance, PG Department of Human Physiology & BMLT, Raja Narendra Lal Khan Women's College (Autonomous), Midnapore,India.

Mousumi Mitra (M)

Laboratory of Human Performance, PG Department of Human Physiology & BMLT, Raja Narendra Lal Khan Women's College (Autonomous), Midnapore,India.

Purna Nandi (P)

Laboratory of Human Performance, PG Department of Human Physiology & BMLT, Raja Narendra Lal Khan Women's College (Autonomous), Midnapore,India.

Madhumita Pandey (M)

Laboratory of Human Performance, PG Department of Human Physiology & BMLT, Raja Narendra Lal Khan Women's College (Autonomous), Midnapore,India.

Mousumi Chakrabarty (M)

Laboratory of Human Performance, PG Department of Human Physiology & BMLT, Raja Narendra Lal Khan Women's College (Autonomous), Midnapore,India.

Mantu Saha (M)

Work Physiology & Yoga Laboratory, Defence Institute of Physiology and Allied Sciences (DIPAS), Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), Delhi,India.

Dilip Kumar Nandi (DK)

Laboratory of Human Performance, PG Department of Human Physiology & BMLT, Raja Narendra Lal Khan Women's College (Autonomous), Midnapore,India.

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