| Literature DB >> 20721289 |
Maria Cristina Polidori1, Gereon Nelles, Ludger Pientka.
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to summarize current knowledge on the possible advantages of lifestyle interventions, with particular attention to physical fitness, cognitive activity, leisure and social activity as well as nutrition. There is a large amount of published papers providing partial evidence and asserting the need for immediate, appropriate preventive lifestyle measures against dementia and AD development. Nevertheless, there are currently great difficulties in drafting effective guidelines in this field. This depends mainly upon lack of randomized controlled trials assessing benefits versus risks of particular lifestyle interventions strategies. However, due to the rapid increase of dementia burden, lifestyle factors and their amelioration should be already made part of decision making in light of their health-maintaining effects while awaiting for results of well-designed large prospective cohort studies in dementia.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20721289 PMCID: PMC2915647 DOI: 10.4061/2010/393579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Alzheimers Dis
Figure 1Network of factors possibly and/or certainly influencing dementia risk. Factors specifically addressed in this paper are highlighted in bold.
RCT and prospective cohort studies on the effects of physical activity, cognitive and social activity, and natural nutrition on cognition and or dementia risk in healthy or demented patients aged 70 years and older.
| Diagnosis | Design | Number | Outcome | Intervention/Measure | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PHYSICAL ACTIVITY | ||||||
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| Baum et al. [ | Mild Dementia (mean MMSE 21/30) | RCT | 20 | Cognition | Strength training or recreational therapy 6 months | Improved MMSE with physical activity |
| Van de Winkel et al. [ | Severe Dementia (mean MMSE 13/30) | RCT | 15 | Cognition | Physical activity + music or conversation 3 months | Improved MMSE with physical activity |
| Weuve et al. [ | Healthy women | Prospective cohort Nerses' Health Study | 766 | Cognition | Physical activity and walking | Better cognitive function/less cognitive decline with physical activity and walking |
| Stevens and Killeen [ | Mild and Severe Dementia (MMSE 9-23/30) | RCT | 75 | Clock drawing test | Physical activity or social visit or none | Slower cognitive decline with physical activity |
| Lautenschlager et al. [ | Subjective memory impairment | RCT | 308 | Dementia | Education and usual care versus physical activity for 6 mos | (Modest) Cognitive improvement at 18 mos |
| Brown et al. [ | Healthy subjects | RCT | 134 | Cognition | Balance versus general training | Cognitive improvement at 6 months |
| Verghese et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective Cohort | 469 | Dementia | Physical activity versus Leisure/Cognitive Activity | Decreased risk for dementia |
| Abbott et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective cohort Honolulu Asia Aging | 2257 | Dementia | Physical activity, walking | Decreased risk for dementia |
| Larson et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective cohort | 1740 | Dementia | Physical exercise | Decreased risk for dementia |
| Cassilhas et al. [ | Healthy subjects | RCT | 62 | Cognition | Moderate or High-level resistance training | Improvement of cognition with both levels of resistance training |
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| SOCIAL, COGNITIVE AND LEISURE ACTIVITY | ||||||
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| Scarmeas et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective cohort | 1772 | Dementia | Leisure activities | Decreased risk for dementia |
| Wang et al. [ | Healthy subjects Kungsholmen project | Prospective cohort | 152 | Dementia | Intellectual and social stimulation | Decreased risk for dementia |
| Verghese et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective cohort | 469 | Dementia | Leisure activities | Decreased risk for dementia |
| Karp et al. [ | Healthy subjects Kungsholmen project | Prospective cohort | 776 | Dementia | Mental, physical or social activity versus two or more | Decreased risk for dementia with increasing number of activities |
| Verghese et al. [ | Healthy subjects of the Bronx Aging Study | Prospective cohort | 437 | Amnestic MCI | Leisure activities | Decreased risk for MCI with increasing number of activities |
| Willis et al. [ | Healthy subjects | RCT | 2832 | Cognition | Verbal episodic memory training versus Inductive reasoning training versus visual search and identification training versus no training | Improved cognition with any training type |
| Helzner et al. [ | AD | Prospective cohort | 287 | Cognition | Leisure activities | No association |
| Wilson et al. [ | Healthy subjects from Rush Memory and Aging Project | Prospective cohort | 770 | MCI | Cognitive activities | Decreased risk for MCI with increased cognitive activity |
| Karp et al. [ | Healthy subjects Kungsholmen project | Prospective cohort | 931 | Dementia | Work complexity | Decreased risk for dementia with increasing work complexity |
| Healthy subjects Kungsholmen project | Prospective cohort | 506 | Dementia | Neuroticism and extraversion | Decreased risk for dementia with low neuroticism and high extraversion | |
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| NUTRITION | ||||||
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| Barberger-Gateau et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective Cohort | 8085 | Dementia | Fruit and vegetable intake versus fish and omega-3 fat | Decreased risk for dementia with high fruit, vegetable, fish and omega-3 fat intake |
| Luchsinger et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective Cohort | 980 | AD | Daily intake of calories, carbohydrates, fats and proteins | Increased risk for AD with increased caloric and fat intake |
|
Morris et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective Cohort | 1718 | Cognition | High versus low fruit and vegetable intake | Slower cognitive decline with high vegetable intake |
| Scarmeas et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective Cohort | 2258 | AD | Adherence to Mediterranean diet versus no adherence | Decreased risk for AD with increased adherence to Mediterranean diet |
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Morris et al. [ | Healthy subjects | Prospective Cohort | 1041 | AD | Nutritional folate, B12, B6 vitamins | No association |