| Literature DB >> 32215357 |
David Predovan1,2,3, Anne Julien1,4, Alida Esmail5, Louis Bherer1,3,4,6.
Abstract
A growing body of research emphasizes the benefits of physical activity and exercise over the lifespan and especially in elderly populations. However, few studies have evaluated the impact of dance as a physical activity or exercise on cognition in healthy older adults. This review investigated if dance could be used as a promising alternative intervention to address physical inactivity and to cognitively stimulate older adults. This systematic review reports the effects of dancing in a healthy older adult population based on intervention studies using the EMBASE, Web of Science, and Ovid Medline databases. The Cochrane collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias was used to assess each article quality. Seven out of 99 articles met the inclusion criteria, representing a total of 429 older adults (70% women), with a mean age of 73.17 years old. Dance interventions, lasting between 10 weeks and 18 months, were related to either the maintenance or improvement of cognitive performance. This systematic review suggests that dance as an intervention in the elderly could help improve or maintain cognition. This review outlines some of the possible mechanisms by which dance could positively impact cognition in older adults, addresses shortcomings in the existing literature, and proposes future research avenues.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Cognition; Dancing; Prevention
Year: 2018 PMID: 32215357 PMCID: PMC7061925 DOI: 10.1007/s41465-018-0103-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cogn Enhanc ISSN: 2509-3304
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram summarizing the results of the search strategy
Characteristics of the studies included
| Reference | Dance intervention | Control | Duration | Assessment: cognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coubard et al. ( | Contemporary dance ( | Fall prevention ( Tai Chi Chuan ( | 60 min/week for approx. 5.7 months | Arithmetic word problems, Stroop test, Rule shift cards test* |
| Hackney et al. ( | Adapted tango ( | Health education ( | 20 × 90 min for 4 months | Montreal Cognitive Assessment, Reverse Corsi Blocks, Brooks Spatial Task, Trail-Making Test Part B, Body Position Spatial Task* |
| Hamacher et al. ( | Dancing ( | Health-related exercise ( | 2 × 90 min/week for 6 months | Motor-cognitive dual task*: walking while reciting successive subtraction |
| Kattenstroth et al. ( | Dancing (Agilando™) ( | No intervention ( | 60 min/week for 6 months | Non-verbal geriatric concentration test (AKT), Frankfurt Attention Inventory*, Repeatable Battery of Neuropsychological Status*, Non-Verbal Learning test, Raven Standard Progressive Matrices* |
| Kosmat and Vranic | Dancing ( | Non-dance active group ( | 45 min/week for 10 weeks | Modified Auditory Verbal Learning test (AVLT)*, Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST)* |
| Merom et al. ( | Ballroom dancing ( | Home walking ( | 2 × 60 min/week for 8 months | Trail Making tests, Stroop Color-Word test, Digit Span Backwards test, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning test: immediate and delayed verbal recall, BVMT Visuospatial recall* |
| Mueller et al. ( | Dance ( | Sport ( | 2 × 90 min/week for 6 months, then 1 × 90 min/week for 12 months | Modified Rey Auditory Verbal Learning test*, Test of Attentional Performance (TAP)* |
*Significant (P < 0.05) post-intervention performance improvements for the dance intervention
Fig. 2Risk-of-bias graph