| Literature DB >> 28360996 |
Bin-Yin Li1, Ying Wang1, Hui-Dong Tang1, Sheng-Di Chen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cognitive decline poses a great concern to elderly people and their families. In addition to pharmacological therapies, several varieties of nonpharmacological intervention have been developed. Most training trials proved that a well-organized task is clinically effective in cognition improvement. MAIN BODY: We will first review clinical trials of cognitive training for healthy elders, MCI and AD patients, respectively. Besides, potential neuroprotective and compensatory mechanisms in animal models of AD are discussed. Despite controversy, cognitive training has promising effect on cognitive ability. In animal model of AD, environmental enrichment showed beneficial effect for cognitive ability, as well as neuronal plasticity. Neurotrophin, neurotransmitter and neuromodulator signaling pathway were also involved in the process. Well-designed cognitive activity could benefit cognitive function, and thus life quality of patients and their families.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28360996 PMCID: PMC5371186 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-017-0078-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Meta-analysis studies for cognitive training in healthy elders, MCI and AD patients
| Reference | Participants | Training | Trials | Positive outcomes | Negative outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lampit, et al., 2014 [ | Healthy elders | Computerized cognitive training | 51 | Overall effect; nonverbal, verbal and working memory; processing speed | EF and attention |
| Toril, P. et al., 2014 [ | Healthy elders | Vedio game training | 20 | Reaction time, attention, memory, and global cognition | EF |
| Kelly, ME et al., 2014 [ | Healthy elders | Memory-based intervention/diverse stimulations. | 31 | Executive function/global cognition—compared with active control | WM,recall, recognition |
| Papp, K. et al., 2009 [ | Healthy elders | Multi-domain training | 10 | All outcome measuresc | - |
| Li, H. et al., 2011 [ | MCI | Multi-domain training | 17 | Overall cognition, self-ratings, EM, WM, EF | SM, PS, attention, VS |
| Martin, M. et al., 2011 [ | Healthy elders | Multi-domain training | 11 | Immediate recalla | - |
| 6 | Delayed recalla | - | |||
| 2 | - | VS | |||
| 5 | - | Short-term memory | |||
| 1 | EFa | - | |||
| Bahar-F. et al., 2013 [ | AD + VD | Multi-domain training | 11 | - | Any reported outcomes |
| Aquirre, E . et al., 2013 [ | Dementia b | Cognitive and social function | 7 | ADAS-Cog | - |
| Sitzer, DI. et al., 2006 [ | AD | At least one domain cognitive function | 17 | Overall cognitive ability | - |
| Woods, B. et al., 2012 [ | Dementia b | Cognitive stimulation | 7 | ADAS-Cog | - |
EF executive function, WM working memory, MCI mild cognitive impairment, EM episodic memory, PS processing speed, VS visual-spatial ability, VD vascular dementia
aImprovements observed did not exceed the improvement in the active control condition
bAlzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia mixed Alzheimer’s and vascular dementia, other types of dementia. ADAS-Cog was applied only in AD patients
cSignificant but negligible
Cognitive activity effects of enriched environment in animal models
| References | Animal models | Age (weeks) | EE Duration (weeks) | Behavior effects | Morphological effects | Molecular effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kempermannet et al., 2002 [ | wild type, C57BL | 40 | 40 | Behavioral performance↑ | Hippocampal neurogenesis↑ | |
| Veyrac et al., 2008 [ | wild type, C57BL | 8 - 12 | 7 | Short-term olfactory memory ↑ | Neurogenesis↑ | Noradrenalin levels↑ |
| Frick KM et al., 2003 [ | wild type, C57BL | 12, 104- 108 | 3 | spatial learning task in water maze task ↑ | synaptophysin levels↑ | |
| Polito L et al., 2014 [ | APP23, C57BL | 12 | 20, 60 | behavioral performance in Water Maze and visual novel Object Recognition Test ↑ | Aβ 40/42, pGlu-Aβ 3-40/3-42, or Aβ oligomer level→ | BDNF expression↑, sirtuin mRNA and protein levels→ |
| Jeong et al., 2011 [ | APP, C57BL | 12 | 12 or 24 | Cognitive performance↑ | Hippocampal neurogensis↑, P-tau at AT8 and AT180 sites ↓, Aβ plaque and levels ↓ | |
| Valero et al., 2011 [ | APP, C57BL | 12 | 7 | Learning and memory↑ | neurogenesis ↑, the number of DCX-positive cells↑ | |
| Wolf et al., 2006 [ | APP23, C57BL | 10 | 34 | Water maze performance↑ | Hippocampal neurogensis↑, Aβ plaque ↓ | NT-3, BDNF levels↑ |
| Costa et al., 2007 [ | PDGF-hAPP, C57BL | 3 | 18-22 | performance of multiple behavioral tasks and memory ↑ | Total Aβ and amyloid plaque levels↓ | Hippocampal gene expression changed |
| Jankowsky JL et al.,2005 [ | APP/PS1, C57BL | 8 | 24 | Cognitive function↑ | Hippocampal Aβ levels ↑ | |
| Berardi et al., 2007 [ | AD11, C57BL | 8 | 20 | Spatial and visual recognition memory ↑ | Aβ burdens↓ | Cholinergic deficits↓ |
| Dong et al., 2007 [ | PS1/2 CKO, B6CBA | 4 | 20 | memory performance↑ | less enlargement of the lateral ventricles ↑ | inflammation-related genes↓ |
| Varman et al., 2013 [ | Mus booduga | 12 | 4 | anxiety-like behavior↓ | miR-183 expression↑ | acetylcholinesterase level in amygdala of mice ↓ |
| Durairaj et al., 2014 [ | Mus booduga | 12 | 4 | anxiety-like behavioral↓ | Hippocampal neurogenesis↑ | Dicer, Ago-2 and microRNA-124a expression↑ |
Aβ amyloid beta protein, P-tau phosphorylated tau, pGlu-Aβ 3-40/3-42 Human pGlu-amyloidβ3–40 and human pGlu-amyloidβ3–42, AT8 specifically recognizing phospho Ser202/Thr205 tau, AT180 monoclonal raised against residue Thr231 of PHF-tau, NT-3 Neurotrophin-3, BDNF Brain-derived neurotrophic factor, Dicer argonaute RISC catalytic component 2, Ago-2 argonaute RISC catalytic component 2
Fig. 1The two circles illustrate the beneficial effect of cognitive training in both clinical and laboratorial studies. The “bedside” semi-circle includes major cognitive trainings that have been tried in healthy old adults, MCI and AD patients. In contrary to heterogeneity of human, mouse models in “bench” semi-circle are nearly monotonous: enriched environment, which offers colorful housing condition including social, sensory and cognitive enrichment. Social enrichment allows more mice dwelling at a large cage to gain companionship and communication. Sensory enrichment provides animals with more novel and complex environments, ladders, colorful toys and various objects for example. And cognitive enrichment stimulates animals’ cognitive processes, particularly learning and memory, in form of maze solving. Exposure to EE could improve animals’ cognitive performance and rescue brain atrophy, which elicited by a number of key molecular and cellular factors, acting at a single neuron or neural circuit level. The shared part of two circles demonstrates neurological effect of interventions for both human and mice, including behavioral, brain structural, neuronal and neural chemicals changes