| Literature DB >> 30618578 |
Laura Chaddock-Heyman1, Kirk I Erickson2, Caitlin Kienzler3, Eric S Drollette4, Lauren B Raine5, Shih-Chun Kao5, Jeanine Bensken6, Robert Weisshappel1, Darla M Castelli7, Charles H Hillman5,8, Arthur F Kramer1,5.
Abstract
Children are becoming increasingly inactive, unfit, and overweight, yet there is relatively little causal evidence regarding the effects of physical activity on brain health during childhood. The present study examined the effects of an after-school physical activity program (FITKids2) on the microstructure of white matter tracts in 7- to 9-year-old children. We measured the microstructural properties of white matter via diffusion tensor imaging in 143 children before and after random assignment to either a 9-month after-school physical activity program (N = 76, mean age = 8.7 years) or a wait list control group (N = 67, mean age = 8.7 years). Our results demonstrate that children who participated in the physical activity program showed increased white matter microstructure in the genu of the corpus callosum, with no changes in white matter microstructure in the wait list control group which reflects typical development. Specifically, children in the physical activity program showed increases in fractional anisotropy (FA) and decreases in radial diffusivity (RD) in the genu from pre- to post-test, thereby suggesting more tightly bundled and structurally compact fibers (FA) and increased myelination (RD), with no changes in estimates of axonal fiber diameter (axial diffusivity, AD). The corpus callosum integrates cognitive, motor, and sensory information between the left and right hemispheres of the brain, and the white matter tract plays a role in cognition and behavior. Our findings reinforce the importance of physical activity for brain health during child development.Entities:
Keywords: brain deve; children; diffusion tensor imaging; physical activity; white matter
Year: 2018 PMID: 30618578 PMCID: PMC6305717 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Flow diagram of the FITKids2 DTI participants.
Mean (SD) for physical activity and wait list control groups at pre-test and post-test.
| Age (years) | 8.7 (0.57) | 9.5 (0.61) | 8.7 (0.5) | 9.4 (0.51) |
| Gender | 39 girls, 37 boys | 34 girls, 33 boys | ||
| IQ | 110.4 (16.9) | 111.7 (12.0) | ||
| Pubertal timing | 1.39 (0.47) | 1.37 (0.45) | ||
| SES | 1.91 (0.79) | 1.90 (0.76) | ||
| VO2 max (mL/kg/min) | 42.26 (7.9) | 42.86 (7.8) | 42.96 (6.9) | 42.95 (6.1) |
| VO2 max percentile | 34.80 (31.2) | 36.33 (31.1) | 38.69 (29.4) | 37.1 (26.9) |
| BMI (kg/cm2) | 19.0 (3.7) | 19.2 (3.68) | 18.7 (4.06) | 19.4 (4.52) |
| FA genu of corpus callosum | 0.750 (0.022)* | 0.755 (0.021)* | 0.754 (0.021) | 0.754 (0.022) |
| RD Genu (mm2/s) | 0.00032 (0.00003)* | 0.00030 (0.00004)* | 0.00031 (0.00003) | 0.00031 (0.00003) |
| AD Genu (mm2/s) | 0.00148 (0.00006) | 0.00148 (0.00005) | 0.00149 (0.00005) | 0.00149 (0.00007) |
| FA body of corpus callosum | 0.694 (0.034) | 0.703 (0.025) | 0.696 (0.034) | 0.700 (0.025) |
| FA splenium of corpus callosum | 0.789 (0.022) | 0.797 (0.022) | 0.795 (0.022) | 0.798 (0.014) |
| FA corona radiata | 0.506 (0.023) | 0.514 (0.030) | 0.505 (0.023) | 0.509 (0.022) |
| FA superior longitudinal fasciculus | 0.514 (0.028) | 0.520 (0.033) | 0.517 (0.025) | 0.520 (0.025) |
| FA posterior thalamic radiation | 0.618 (0.032) | 0.622 (0.029) | 0.623 (0.032) | 0.622 (0.030) |
| FA uncinate fasciculus | 0.533 (0.056) | 0.540 (0.042) | 0.549 (0.052) | 0.541 (0.045) |
IQ, woodcock johnson III paper and pencil task of general intellectual ability (Woodcock, .
Figure 2Illustration of the significant Group × Time interaction for FA in the genu of the corpus callosum, with the physical activity group showing significant increases in FA from pre-test to post-test, and no changes in FA for the control group. The result suggests increased estimates of white matter microstructure and fiber integrity with physical activity participation.
Figure 3Illustration of the significant Group × Time interaction for RD in the genu of the corpus callosum, with the physical activity group showing significant decreases in RD from pre-test to post-test, with no changes in RD for the control group (p = 0.592). The result suggests increased estimates of white matter myelination with physical activity participation.