
The benefits of exercise may go beyond just physical health. Researchers studied nearly 3,600 people across two large datasets to figure out how brain health relates to aging and metabolic health
Metabolic health encompasses metrics like weight, blood sugar, cholesterol, and blood pressure. The researchers used detailed brain scans (measuring brain structure, blood flow, and connectivity) alongside blood tests and physical measurements, then used a statistical method (partial least squares) to find patterns connecting body measurements to brain measurements
As people get older, their brains show thinner cortex (the brain’s outer layer), reduced blood flow, slower blood delivery to brain tissue, and other signs of structural wear. This was the strongest pattern in the data
Independent of age, people with poorer metabolic health showed reduced blood flow to the brain. Brain structure itself did not change as much as blood flow did. Blood flow to the brain delivers oxygen, glucose, and nutrients to keep neurons firing and functioning. It also clears out waste products and toxic byproducts of brain metabolism
The brain-blood-flow pattern tied to metabolic dysfunction was associated with worse performance on fluid/flexible thinking tasks. These are tasks requiring active problem-solving, working memory, and mental flexibility
From an aging perspective, brain patterns had lower overall thinking flexibility, though interestingly they performed better on tasks relying on accumulated knowledge/vocabulary. This is consistent with the well-known pattern that knowledge-based skills tend to hold up or even improve with age, while raw processing speed and problem-solving decline
While you can’t fight father time, you can certainly make an effort to improve your metabolic health. Since exercise is one of the most well-established ways to improve metabolic health, it may also be quietly protecting your brain’s blood flow along the way
This story was originally published byMen’s Fitnesson Jun 25, 2026, where it first appeared in theNewssection. Add Men’s Fitness as aPreferred

