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Narrative review examines exercise effects on anxiety, depression, and metabolic dysfunction without reported outcomes

Narrative review examines exercise effects on anxiety, depression, and metabolic dysfunction…
Photo by Gold's Gym Nepal / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Note that this narrative review lacks outcome data for exercise in mental and metabolic conditions.

This publication is a narrative review that explores the intersection of physical activity with mental and metabolic health conditions. The scope includes anxiety, depression, cardiovascular dysfunction, and metabolic dysfunction, though no specific population or sample size is provided in the source text.

The authors discuss the general concept of exercise as an intervention but do not report primary or secondary outcomes, p-values, or confidence intervals. Consequently, no pooled effect sizes or specific efficacy rates can be derived from this source.

The review acknowledges that key details such as the study setting, follow-up duration, and safety profiles were not reported. Without these data points, the certainty of any benefit is low, and the authors do not make strong causal claims.

Clinicians should interpret these qualitative arguments with caution. The absence of reported adverse events or discontinuation rates means that the tolerability profile of exercise in these contexts is not defined by this specific source.

Study Details

Study typeSystematic review
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Chronic stress disrupts homeostasis in the brain and body, leading to anxiety, depression, and cardiovascular and metabolic dysfunction. Although exercise can counter these effects, the mechanisms are scattered across fields and not yet integrated. This review proposes a multi-scale framework. Exercise is not only stress-relieving; it is also a controllable challenge that can recalibrate the system when repeated bouts are matched by sufficient recovery and bioenergetic support. We propose that repeated exercise engages a stress response–adaptation–recovery cycle, in which peripheral signals from skeletal muscles, liver, adipose tissue and gut convey body metabolic state to the brain and are consolidated into durable plasticity only when mitochondrial capacity, substrate availability, and redox balance permit recovery. These signals pass through the blood-brain barrier and engage plasticity switches, including neurotrophic signals, epigenetic modification and metabolic coupling, thus stabilizing the neural circuits of threat appraisal, reward processing and contextual memory. By integrating these dimensions, we clarify how exercise can transform short-term physical stress into lasting resilience and provide direction for future research.
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