| Literature DB >> 31075908 |
Brandon Rigdon1, Paul D Loprinzi2.
Abstract
Background andEntities:
Keywords: cognition; cognitive function; episodic memory; physical activity; working memory
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31075908 PMCID: PMC6572478 DOI: 10.3390/medicina55050127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1Flow chart of article retrieval.
Extraction table of the evaluated studies.
| Author | Design | Population | Cardiorespiratory Fitness Assessment | Memory Type | Excluded Active Individuals at Baseline? | Statically Controlled for PA? | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barnes et al. (2003) [ | 6-year prospective cohort study | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Verbal memory and verbal fluency | Not mentioned | No | Baseline CRF was positively and prospectively associated with verbal memory and verbal fluency ( | |
| Burns et al. (2008) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Working memory; logical memory | Not mentioned | No | In early AD, CRF was positively associated with delayed memory (r = 0.30, | |
| Voss et al. (2010) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Spatial memory and working memory | Not mentioned | No | CRF was associated with fewer perseverative errors on the working memory task, | |
| Szabo et al. (2011) [ | Cross-sectional study | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Spatial working memory | Yes, excluded “active” individuals | No | CRF was inversely associated with working memory reaction time ( | |
| Weinstein et al. (2011) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Spatial working memory | Yes, only included “low active” individuals | No | CRF was positively associated with greater working memory performance (F = 13.91, | |
| Erickson et al. (2012) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Digit span task and spatial memory task | Yes, only included individuals “not very physically active” as defined by participation in physical activity on two or fewer days of the week in the past six months | No | Aerobic fitness levels were not correlated with backward digit span lengths ( | |
| Wendell et al. (2013) [ | Prospective cohort, with follow-up to 18-years | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Visual and verbal memory | Not mentioned | No | Lower levels of CRF were associated with a greater decline in learning and memory function | |
| Oberlin et al. (2015) [ | Cross-sectional | Study 1, | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Spatial working memory | Yes, only included “physically inactive individuals” defined by engaging in 30 min or less each week of physical activity within the past 6 months | No | CRF was not associated with spatial working memory (β = 0.17, |
| Schultz et al. (2015) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Working memory, immediate memory, verbal and learning memory | Not mentioned | No | No significant main effect associations between CRF and memory | |
| Tarumi et al. (2015) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Episodic memory (CAVLT) | Evaluated both sedentary and endurance athletes | No | Aerobic fitness percentile was positively associated with memory (r = 0.36) | |
| Scott et al. (2016) [ | Cross-sectional | 120 healthy women aged 18–35 years | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Working memory | Not mentioned | No | Positive association between CRF and working memory (accuracy) (β = 0.15, |
| Hayes et al. (2016) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Episodic memory | Not mentioned | No | CRF was not associated with memory in young adults (F < 1), but was positively associated with memory in older adults (F = 5.40, | |
| Dougherty et al. (2017) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Episodic memory (RAVLT) | Not mentioned. But participants were not enrolled in any exercise trials at the start of the study | No | No overall significant association between CRF and memory, but CRF was positively and significantly associated with memory among men; delayed recall score ( | |
| Hayes et al. (2017) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Source memory (face-name recognition) | Not mentioned | No | Peak CRF accounted for 43.7% of the variance in source memory (F = 18.64, | |
| Hwang et al. (2017) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Working memory | Not mentioned | No | Higher CRF was associated with higher correct trials (F = 4.70, | |
| Schwarb et al. (2017) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Relational memory | Not mentioned. | No | CRF was positively associated with relationship memory (r = 0.29, | |
| Brown et al. (2019) [ | Cross-sectional | Indirect calorimetry; max test | Verbal, visuospatial memory, and paired associative memory | Not mentioned. | No | No difference between the lower-fit and higher-fit groups were observed on the CVALT delayed recall (F = 0.73, |