Author: Khalsa DS, Amen D, Hanks C, Money N, Newberg A.
Affiliation: aAlzheimer\'s Research and Prevention Foundation, Tucson, Arizona bAmen Clinics, Inc., Newport Beach, California cUS Air Force, Office of the Surgeon General dDepartment of Radiology, Division of Nuclear Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, USA.
Conference/Journal: Nucl Med Commun.
Date published: 2009 Sep 19
Other:
Word Count: 148
PURPOSE: To examine changes in brain physiology during a chanting meditation practice using cerebral blood flow single-photon emission computed tomography. METHODS: Single-photon emission computed tomography scans were acquired in 11 healthy individuals during either a resting state or meditation practice randomly performed on two separate days. Statistical parametric mapping analyses were conducted to identify significant changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) between the two conditions. RESULTS: When the meditation state was compared with the baseline condition, significant rCBF increases were observed in the right temporal lobe and posterior cingulate gyrus, and significant rCBF decreases were observed in the left parietotemporal and occipital gyri. CONCLUSION: The results offer evidence that this form of meditation practice is associated with changes in brain function in a way that is consistent with earlier studies of related types of meditation as well as with the positive clinical outcomes anecdotally reported by its users.