A new study has revealed that older people who  regularly exercise at a moderate to intense level are less likely to  develop the small brain lesions, sometimes referred to as ‘silent  strokes’.
A total of 43  percent of the participants reported that they had no regular exercise;  36 percent engaged in regular light exercise, and 21 percent engaged in  regular moderate to intense exercise.
The brain scans  showed that 197 of the participants, or 16 per cent, had small brain  lesions, or infarcts, called silent strokes.
People  who engaged in moderate to intense exercise were 40 percent less likely  to have the silent strokes than people who did no regular exercise.
The  results also remained the same after the researchers took into account  other vascular risk factors such as high blood pressure, high  cholesterol and smoking.
However, there was no difference between those who engaged in light exercise and those who did not exercise.
The study was published in the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
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