| Literature DB >> 31866852 |
Cindy K Barha1,2,3, Chun-Liang Hsu1,2,3, Lisanne Ten Brinke1,2,3, Teresa Liu-Ambrose1,2,3.
Abstract
The number of older people worldwide living with cognitive impairment and neurodegenerative diseases is growing at an unprecedented rate. Despite accumulating evidence that engaging in physical activity is a promising primary behavioral strategy to delay or avert the deleterious effects of aging on brain health, a large degree of variation exists in study findings. Thus, before physical activity and exercise can be prescribed as "medicine" for promoting brain health, it is imperative to understand how different biological factors can attenuate or amplify the effects of physical activity on cognition at the individual level. In this review article, we briefly discuss the current state of the literature, examining the relationship between physical activity and brain health in older adults and we present the argument that biological sex is a potent moderator of this relationship. Additionally, we highlight some of the potential neurobiological mechanisms underlying this sex difference for this relatively new and rapidly expanding line of research.Entities:
Keywords: aging; cognition; dementia; exercise; hippocampus; physical activity; prefrontal cortex; sex differences
Year: 2019 PMID: 31866852 PMCID: PMC6908464 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2019.00329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Evidence for sex differences in the effect of physical activity on cognition and the brain in older humans.
| Study | Population | Study type and Physical activity | Results and conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baker et al. ( | 15 older females with MCI 14 older males with MCI | RCT 6 months of high intensity AT Stretching control | In females, AT improved performance in 4/5 tests of executive function (Symbol-Digit, Verbal Fluency, Stroop, Trails B). In males, AT only improved performance in 1/5 tests (Trails B). |
| Barha et al. ( | 29 older females with SIVCI 29 older males with SIVCI | RCT 6 months of moderate intensity AT Usual care plus education control | In females, AT improved executive functioning on the Trail Making Test. In males, AT did not improve executive functioning. |
| Barha et al. ( | 1,497 older females cognitively healthy (177 females with MRI) 1,376 older males cognitively healthy (126 males with MRI) | Epidemiological cohort study Self-reported time spent walking (mins/week) each year for 10 years | In females, maintaining PA over 10 years predicted less declines in executive functioning on the Digit Symbol Substitution Test and was associated with greater volume of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. In males, maintaining PA did not predict executive functioning. |
| van Uffelen et al. ( | 67 older females with MCI 85 older males with MCI | RCT 12 months of moderate intensity AT Low intensity, non-aerobic balance and flexibility exercise control | In females, increased adherence to the AT program was associated with improved executive functioning on the Stroop test and on an auditory verbal memory test. In males, attendance in at least 75% of AT classes was required before improvements in only auditory verbal memory were seen. |
| Varma et al. ( | 64 older females cognitively healthy 28 older males cognitively healthy | Sub study of an RCT Daily walking activity measuring using a step activity monitor worn on the dominant ankle for 3–7 days | In females, greater amount, duration, and frequency of total daily walking were all associated with larger hippocampal volume. In males, associations were not significant. |