Exercise, fitness and cognition – A randomised controlled trial in older individuals: The DR’s EXTRA study - 27/10/10


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Abstract |
Background |
Observational studies suggest that higher levels of physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness associate with improved cognition. However, evidence from randomised controlled trials (RCT) is limited. We hypothesised that increased regular exercise improves cognition in older individuals. The trial is registered: ISRCTN45977199 (isrctn.org/).
Methods |
A population sample of 1335 men and women aged 57–78 years was randomised into aerobic exercise, resistance exercise, diet, combined aerobic exercise and diet, combined resistance exercise and diet or reference group for a 4-year intervention. Here, we report 2-year interim data. Exercise was assessed by a questionnaire and by maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max), an objective measure of exercise, and cognition using Consortium to establish a registry for Alzheimer’s disease (CERAD) neuropsychological tests.
Findings |
In the intention to treat analyses, regular exercise increased in exercise groups, but remained unchanged in reference and diet only groups (P<0.001 between groups). VO2max remained unchanged in exercise groups, but decreased in reference and diet only groups (P<0.001 between groups). There were between group differences neither in cognition, nor in the association of VO2max to cognition during the first 2 years of intervention. In secondary analyses, improved VO2max was associated with improved immediate memory in aerobic (β=0.11, P=0.001), resistance (β=0.08, P=0.018), diet (β=0.09, P=0.029) and combined aerobic and diet groups (β=0.09, P=0.013), with improved delayed memory in diet group (β=0.08, P=0.015) and with verbal performance in aerobic group (β=0.14, P=0.044). Those who were in the upper gender-specific VO2max tertile had a 66.0% (95% confidence interval [CI] 34.2–82.4%, P=0.001) lower, and those in the middle tertile a 56.4% (95% CI 22.6–75.4%, P=0.005) lower risk of developing impaired delayed memory compared to those in the lower VO2max tertile, after adjusting for potential confounders.
Conclusions |
Present data from a large RCT among older individuals failed to show between group differences on the effects of regular exercise on cognition. However, secondary analyses suggest that higher levels of fitness may potentially mitigate memory impairment.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Ageing, Physical exercise, Cognitive function, Memory, Randomised controlled trial
Plan
Vol 1 - N° 5
P. 266-272 - octobre 2010 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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