Effects of QiGong on brain function
- 19 July 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Neurological Research
- Vol. 23 (5) , 501-505
- https://doi.org/10.1179/016164101101198749
Abstract
QiGong is an ancient and widely practiced Chinese meditation exercise. We studied the effects of QiGong on brain function with modern neuromonitoring tools in two subjects. In a male QiGong master (extremely trained practitioner), the technique induced reproducible changes in transcranial Doppler sonography, EEG, stimulus-induced 40 Hz oscillations, and near-infrared spectroscopy findings. Similar effects were seen after the application of multimodal stimuli and when the master concentrated on intense imagined stimuli (e.g. 22.2% increase in mean blood flow velocity (vm) in the posterior cerebral artery, and a simultaneous 23.1% decrease of vm in the middle cerebral artery). Similar effects were seen in the female subject. Neuromonitoring during QiGong appears able to objectify accompanied cerebral modulations surrounding this old Chinese meditation exercise. [Neurol Res 2001; 23: 501-505]Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Normwerte visuell evozierter Strömungsgeschwindigkeitsänderungen in der A. cerebri posteriorKlinische Neurophysiologie, 2000
- Specific Effects of Laserpuncture on the Cerebral CirculationLasers in Medical Science, 2000
- Computer-controlled acupuncture®. Quantification and separation of specific effectsNeurological Research, 1999
- Ultrasound-monitored effects of acupuncture on brain and eyeNeurological Research, 1999
- Robotic Transcranial Doppler Sonography Probes and AcupunctureInternational Journal of Neuroscience, 1998
- Changes in Brainstem and Cortical Auditory Potentials During Qi-Gong MeditationThe American Journal of Chinese Medicine, 1990
- EEG findings during special psychical state (Qi Gong state) by means of compressed spectral array and topographic mappingComputers in Biology and Medicine, 1988
- Statistical Brain Topographic Mapping Analysis for EEGs Recorded During Qi Gong StateInternational Journal of Neuroscience, 1988
- Visually evoked dynamic blood flow response of the human cerebral circulation.Stroke, 1987
- Physiological Effects of Transcendental MeditationScience, 1970