| Literature DB >> 32491278 |
Jin-Lei Zhao1, Wan-Ting Jiang2, Xing Wang2, Zhi-Dong Cai2, Zu-Hong Liu2, Guo-Rong Liu1.
Abstract
Depression is a common mental disorder characterized by high incidence, high disability, and high fatality, causing great burden to the society, families, and individuals. The changes in brain plasticity may be a main reason for depression. Recent studies have shown that exercise plays a positive role in depression, but systematic and comprehensive studies are lacking on brain plasticity changes in depression. To further understand the antidepressive effect of exercise and the changes in brain plasticity, we retrieved related literatures using key words "depression," "depressive disorder," "exercise," "brain plasticity," "brain structure," and "brain function" from the database of Web of Science, PubMed, EBSCO host, and CNKI, hoping to provide evidence for exercise in preventing and treating depression. Increase in exercise has been found negatively correlated with the risk of depression. Randomized controlled experiments have shown that aerobic exercise, resistance exercise, and mind-body exercise can improve depressive symptoms and levels. The intensity and long-term effect of exercise are now topical research issues. Exercise has been proven to reshape the brain structure of depression patients, activate the function of related brain areas, promote behavioral adaptation changes, and maintain the integrity of hippocampal and white matter volume, thus improving the brain neuroprocessing and delaying cognitive degradation in depression patients. Future studies are urgently needed to establish accurate exercise prescriptions for improving depressive symptoms, and studies on different depressive populations and studies using multimodal brain imaging combined with multiple analytical methods are also needed.Entities:
Keywords: brain function; brain plasticity; brain structure; depression; exercise
Year: 2020 PMID: 32491278 PMCID: PMC7415205 DOI: 10.1111/cns.13385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Neurosci Ther ISSN: 1755-5930 Impact factor: 5.243
Effect of different exercise modes on depression
| Reference | Participant | Age (y) | Gender | Diagnosis | Exercise prescription | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Knubben et al | 20 | 49 ± 13 | Male/female |
DSM‐IV BRMS | Walk for 10 d, 5 times a day, 80% THR, 15 min | BRMS↓, CES‐D↓ |
| Blumenthal et al | 51 | ≥40 | Male/female |
DSM‐IV BDI‐II | Jogging, 16 wk, 3 times a week, 70%‐85% HRR intensity, 45 min |
HAMD↓ |
| Helgadóttir et al | 620 | 18 ~ 67 | Male/female | PHQ‐9 | Fitness exercises, stretching and balance exercises, 12 wk, 3 times a week, intensity 60%‐80% MHR, 55 min | MADRS↓ |
| Hanssen et al | 34 | 37.8 | Male/female |
ICD‐10 BDI‐II | Cycling, 4 wk, 3 times a week, 60%‐80% VO2max intensity, 35 min, 30 s interval |
BDI‐II ↓ |
| Trivedi et al | 122 | 18 ~ 70 | Male/female |
DSM‐IV HDRS | Running + cycling, 12 wk, 2‐3 times a week, 4‐16 KKW intensity | HDRS↓ |
|
| ||||||
| Lecheminant et al | 30 | 26.9 ± 5.1 | Female | / | Resistance movement of instruments, 18 wk, twice per week, 8‐12 twice per group, 3 groups, 90‐s interval |
CES‐D↓ |
| Chin et al | 41 | 81.0 ± 5.8 | Male/female | / | Instrument resistance movement, 24 wk, twice a week, 8‐12 twice a group, 2 groups, 45‐60 min |
GDS (constant) |
| Chen et al | 65 | ≥65 | Male/female | / | Elastic exercise with resistance, 64 wk, 3 times a week, 40 min |
CSDD↓ ·· |
| Aidar et al | 11 | 51.7 ± 8.0 | Male/female | / | Antiresistance movement of instruments, 12 wk, 3 times a week, 8‐10 times a group, 3 groups, 50%1RM intensity, 60‐min practice, 2‐min interval | BDI↓· |
| Singh et al | 60 | ≥60 | Male/female |
DSM‐IV GDS | Antiresistance movement of instruments, 8 wk, 3 times a week, 8 times a group, 3 groups, intensity 20%‐80%1RM, exercise for 60 min |
GDS↓ HDRS↓ |
| Khorvash et al | 60 | 25.1 ± 3.2 | Male/female | Beck and Kettle questionnaire | Antiresistance movement of the instrument, 10 wk, twice a week, a total of 20 times, 90 min |
Beck and Kettle questionnaire↓ |
|
| ||||||
| Kinser et al | 15 | 40.93 ± 15.84 | Female | MINI | Hatha Yoga, 8 wk, once a week, intensity based on the difficulty of posture, practice 75 min |
PHQ‐9↓ |
| Kinser et al | 15 | 40.93 ± 15.84 | Female | MINI | Hatha Yoga, 8 wk, 1 wk, intensity based on the difficulty of posture, 75 min; 1‐year follow‐up |
PHQ‐9↓ |
| Uebelacker et al | 63 | 46.78 ± 12.27 | Male/female |
DSM‐IV QIDS | Hatha Yoga, 10 weeks, twice a week, 80‐min |
QIDS↓ PHQ‐9↓ |
| Prathikanti et al | 20 | 22 ~ 72 | Male/female |
MINI MMSE BDI‐II | Hatha Yoga, 8 wk, twice a week, 90 min | BDI‐II ↓ |
| Yeung et al | 23 | 18 ~ 70 | Male/female |
DSM‐IV HDRS | Yang Taijiquan, 12 wk, twice a week, 60 min | BDI‐II↓, HDRS↓ |
| Li et al | 30 | 38 ~ 76 | Male/female | HAMD | Sitting Taijiquan, 5 wk, twice a week, 30 min | HAMD↓ |
| Lavretskyet al. | 33 | 69.1 ± 7.0 | Male/female |
MMSE HDRS | Taijiquan, 10 wk, once a week, 120 min | HDRS↓ |
Abbreviations: ↑, going up; ↓, going down; BDI‐II, Beck Depression Inventory‐II; BRMS, Bech‐Rafaelsen Melancholia Scale; CES‐D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies‐Depression; CSDD, Cornell Scale for Depression; DSM‐IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; GDS, the Geriatric Depression Scale; HAMD, HDRS, Hamilton Depression Scale; HRR, heart rate reserve; ICD‐10, International Classification of diseases; KKW, kcal/kg/week; MADRS, Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale; MHR, maximum heart rate; MINI, Mini‐International Neuropsychiatric Interview; MMSE, Mini‐Mental State Examination; PHQ‐9, Patient Health Questionnaire‐9; QIDS, Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology—Self‐Report; THR, target heart rate.