| Literature DB >> 34299833 |
Pablo Valdés-Badilla1,2, Tomás Herrera-Valenzuela3, Rodrigo Ramirez-Campillo4,5, Esteban Aedo-Muñoz3, Eduardo Báez-San Martín6, Alex Ojeda-Aravena7,8, Braulio Henrique Magnani Branco9.
Abstract
The aim of this systematic review was to analyse the studies centered on the effects of Olympic combat sports (OCS [i.e., boxing, fencing, judo, karate, taekwondo, wrestling]) on older adults' physical-functional, physiological, and psychoemotional health status. The review comprised randomised-controlled trials with OCS interventions, including older adults (≥60 years), and measures of physical-functional, physiological, and/or psychoemotional health. The studies were searched through SCOPUS, PubMed/MEDLINE, Web of Science, PsycINFO, and EBSCO databases until 5 January 2021. The PRISMA-P and TESTEX scales were used to assess the quality of the selected studies. The protocol was registered in PROSPERO (code: CRD42020204034). Twelve OCS intervention studies were found (scored ≥ 60% for methodological quality), comprising 392 females and 343 males (mean age: 69.6 years), participating in boxing, judo, karate, and taekwondo. The qualitative analysis revealed that compared to controls, OCS training improved muscle strength, cardiorespiratory capacity, agility, balance, movement, attention, memory, mental health, anxiety, and stress tolerance. Meta-analysis was available only for the chair stand test, and an improvement was noted after OCS training compared to control. In conclusion, OCS interventions improves older adults' physical-functional, physiological, and psychoemotional health. Our systematic review confirms that OCS training has high adherence (greater than 80%) in older adults.Entities:
Keywords: aging; elderly; exercise; martial arts; physical activity
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34299833 PMCID: PMC8303637 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18147381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flowchart of the review process#. #Based on the PRISMA-P recommendations [25].
Study quality assessment according to TESTEX scale.
| Study | Elegibility Criteria Specified | Randomly Allocated Participants | Allocation Concealed | Gorups Similar at Baseline | Assessors Blinded | Outcome Measures Assesed >85% of Participants * | Intention to Treat Analysis | Reporting of between Group Statistical Comparisons | Point Measures and Measures of Variability Reported ** | Activity Monitoring in Control Group | Relative Exercise Intensity Reviewed | Exercise Volume and Energy Expended | Overall TESTEX # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cho & Roh [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (2) | Yes | Yes | Yes (1) | No | Yes | Yes | 11/15 |
| Ciaccioni et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (3) | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | No | Yes | Yes | 13/15 |
| Ciaccioni et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (3) | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | Yes | Yes | Yes | 14/15 |
| Combs et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes (3) | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | Yes | No | Yes | 13/15 |
| Hu et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes (3) | Yes | Yes | Yes (1) | Yes | No | Yes | 12/15 |
| Jansen & Dahmen-Zimmer [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Unclear | Yes (2) | Yes | Yes | Yes (1) | Yes | No | Yes | 10/15 |
| Jansen et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (3) | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | Yes | No | Yes | 13/15 |
| Lee et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (2) | Yes | Yes | Yes (1) | Yes | Yes | Yes | 12/15 |
| Pacheco Lopes et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (2) | Yes | Yes | Yes (1) | No | No | Yes | 10/15 |
| Pliske et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (1) | Yes | Yes | Yes (1) | No | No | Yes | 9/15 |
| Witte et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes (3) | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | No | No | Yes | 12/15 |
| Witte et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes (3) | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | No | No | Yes | 12/15 |
* Three points possible: one point if adherence > 85%, one point if adverse events reported, one point if exercise attendance is reported. ** Two points possible: one point if primary outcome is reported, one point if all other outcomes reported. # total out of 15 points. TESTEX: Tool for the assEssment of Study qualiTy and reporting in Exercise [26].
Characteristics of the studies that analyse the effects of Olympic combat sports on older adult’s health status.
| Study | Country | Modality of OCS | Sample | Activities Developed in the Intervention | Training Volume | Training Intensity | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Duration (Weeks) | Frequency | Time Per Session (Min) | ||||||
| Cho & Roh [ | South Korea | Taekwondo | 37 older women (mean age 68.9 years) | |||||
| Taekwondo group ( | Stretching, basic taekwondo movement (stance, block, punch, strike, thrust). Poomsae (Taegeuk 1–4 chapter). Kicking (front kick, side kick, roundhouse kick, downward kick). Step (forward, side, backward). Practice mitt kicking. Taekwon gymnastics (2 music-based gymnastics). | 16 | 5 | 60 | Exercise at 50–80% HRmax | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 16 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Ciaccioni et al. [ | Italy | Judo | 40 older adults (age between 64 and 77 years) | |||||
| Judo group ( | 10-min judo-specific warm-up (e.g., light activities and gentle routines of judo postures, movements, and techniques performed at slow speed). 30-min judo (e.g., ne-waza—ground technique, tachi-waza—standing techniques, kata—sequences of specific movements, ukemi—judo falling techniques). A 20-min judo cooldown (e.g., judo kata focused on stretching and relaxation). | 16 | 2 | 60 | Moderate to vigorous | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 16 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Ciaccioni et al. [ | Italy | Judo | 30 older adults (mean age 69.7 years) | |||||
| Judo group ( | 10-min judo-specific warm-up (e.g., light routines and dynamic movements of the whole body mimicking the judo techniques). 30-min judo central part (e.g., standing, ground and ukemi breaking-fall techniques, as uchi-komi repetition training in couple and kata sequences of specific movements, individually and in couple). A 20-min cool-down (e.g., stretching and relaxation using judo techniques performed as kata). | 15 | 2 | 60 | Moderate to vigorous | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 15 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Combs et al. [ | United States of America | Boxing | 31 older adults (mean age 67.3 years) | |||||
| Boxing group ( | Boxing-specific activities via a circuit training, as well as general endurance activities. Activities were self-progressed by encouraging participants to train as intensely as they could tolerate and by striving to complete more repetitions during each training bout. Participants wore boxing gloves and hit boxing-specific punching bags, but did not contact other people while boxing. | 12 | 2–3 | 90 | NR | |||
| Traditional exercise group ( | Each traditional group exercise session began with a 15-min warm-up period consisting of various seated exercises such as multi-planar axial and extremity active range of motion and stretching. The next hour consisted of strengthening exercises, endurance training, and balance activities. Endurance activities included walking in- or out-doors at a self-selected pace and stair climbing. Static and dynamic standing balance activities were performed on different support surfaces and visual input (eyes open and closed). Ended with a 15 m seated cool-down similar to the warm-up plus breathing exercises for relaxation | 12 | 2–3 | 90 | NR | |||
| Hu et al. [ | China | Boxing | 198 older adults (mean age 70 years, 145 men and 53 women) | |||||
| Boxing group ( | The program consisted of jogging for 30 min and shadowboxing for 60 min once a week. | 24 | 1 | 90 | NR | |||
| Control group ( | NR | 24 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Jansen & Dahmen-Zimmer [ | Germany | Karate | 45 older adults (mean age 78.8 years). | |||||
| Karate group ( | Training was performed accordingly the guidelines of the German-Karate Federation. Long sequences of arm and leg movements were taught. | 24 | 1 | 60 | NR | |||
| Physical exercise group ( | Training included simple exercises for strength, mobilization, stretching, and relaxation. Everyday objects such as towels, chairs, etc., were used as exercise equipment. Each session was preceded by warming-up and ended with cooling-down. | 24 | 1 | 60 | NR | |||
| Cognitive group ( | The program consists of 121 tasks, 104 inductive thinking tasks (13 generalizations, 15 discrimination, 17 cross-classification, 32 relations, 14 relation differentiation, and 13 system-building tasks), and 17 deductive thinking and concentration tasks. Tasks appear in a specific order to allow the participants to become familiarized with the task. | 24 | 1 | 60 | NR | |||
| Control group ( | NR | 24 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Jansen et al. [ | Germany | Karate | 54 older adults (mean age 63.5 years). | |||||
| Karate group ( | Karate-Do involves Kihon, Kumite, and Kata. Kihon involves performing specific movements with legs or arms and combinations of both, kumite consists of training with a partner, kata is the execution of a variety of tactical fighting exercises. Participants learned simultaneous movements of legs and arms and exercised partner training. | 8 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Mindfulness-based stress reduction ( | The MBSR is composed of didactic and practice elements. It incorporates sitting and walking meditation, body scan exercises, and mindfulness communication. Training focuses on the perception of and attention to one’s own body, mental states, and emotions in all these elements. | 8 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Control group ( | NR | 8 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Lee et al. [ | South Korea | Taekwondo | 20 older women (mean age 70 years) | |||||
| Taekwondo group ( | Dynamic stretching warm-up for 10 min, then Taekwondo training for 40-min. This consisted of kicks, punches, steps and step-sparring while facing an opponent. They then spent the remaining time practicing Taekwondo forms and then walked, jogged or ran, depending on what intensity was desired. A 10-min, static stretching cool-down. | 12 | 3 | 60 | 30–40% HRmax (4-w). 40–50% HRmax (4-w). 50–60% HRmax (4-w). | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 12 | 3 | 60 | NR | |||
| Pacheco Lopes et al. [ | Brazil | Karate | 33 older adults (mean age 68.7 years) | |||||
| Karate group ( | Training session consisted of brief warmup (5–10 min); Kihon exercises, kata (sequences of Karate-Do movements), kumite and breathing techniques (40–45 min) and relaxation through brief meditation exercises tailored to the needs of the participants (10 min). | 12 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 12 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Pliske et al. [ | Germany | Karate | 68 older adults (mean age 69 years, 29 men and 39 women). | |||||
| Karate group ( | Training session consisted of basic techniques and katas. Kumite and self-defence were no components of the training. The training were adapted to the subjects’ age. | 20 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Fitness group ( | Specific exercises for balance, strength and coordination as well as simple team sports and games were practiced. The individual exercises, except for sports games, had a non-competitive character. | 20 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 20 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Witte et al. [ | Germany | Karate | 90 older adults (mean age 69.3 years, 35 men and 55 women). | |||||
| Karate group ( | The training was as follows: several stances (forward stance, back stance, and straddle-leg stance), several arm techniques during standing, and forward and backward stances (downward block, lunge punch, reverse punch), and upper blocks. Furthermore, the participants learned simple attacks and defense exercises with their partners and a simple kata. | 20 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Fitness group ( | The fitness training included elements of gymnastics, running exercises, practices with a ball and other hand devices, and strengthening exercises. | 20 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 20 | NR | NR | NR | |||
| Witte et al. [ | Germany | Karate | 89 older adults (mean age 70 years, 36 men and 53 women) | |||||
| Karate group ( | They included stances such as forward stances, back stances, and straddle-leg stances to train leg and trunk musculature and balance skills; also included were several arm techniques in standing positions and forward and backward walking (downward-block), lunge punches, reverse punches, and upper blocks to improve arm–leg coordination, and a special karate form | 20 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Fitness group ( | The training unit contained elements of gymnastics, running exercises, practices with balls and other hand devices, age-related games and strengthening exercises. | 20 | 2 | 60 | NR | |||
| Control group ( | They were asked to maintain their usual activities. | 20 | NR | NR | NR | |||
HRmax: maximum heart rate. NR: not reported. MBSR: mindfulness-based stress reduction; Modality of OCS: practiced Olympic combat sports. Sample: total number, mean age of participants, intervention groups and gender. W = weeks.
Effects reported by studies with Olympic combat sports on older adults’ health status.
| Study | Analysed Variables | Data Collection Instruments | Main Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cho & Roh [ | Chair stand test | There significant increases ( | |
| ELISA kit | |||
| MMSE-DS. Stroop colour and word test | |||
| Ciaccioni et al. [ | Digital scale | The judo group showed reductions of waist circumference (Δ = −1%, d = 0.2) and improvements for lower and upper body flexibility (Δ = +69%, d = 0.4 and Δ = +126%, d = 0.5, respectively) and strength (Δ = +12%, d = 0.6 and Δ = +31%, d = 1.6, respectively). The control group showed a decline in lower body strength (Δ = −12%, d = 0.8). Psychological variables did not reveal significant effects. | |
| Handgrip dynamometer | |||
| Body image dimensional assessment | |||
| Ciaccioni et al. [ | 10-m Optojump photocell system | A significant Time × Motor complexity × Group interaction was found for mean values and coefficients of variation. For mean values, Judo group showed improvements for flat and hurdling conditions in step length (flat: ∆ = +2.6%, d = 0.4; hurdling: ∆ = +3.2%, d = 0.4), gait cycle (flat: ∆ = −4.3%, d = 0.4; hurdling: ∆ = −4.0%, d = 0.5), speed (flat: ∆ = +6.6%, d = 0.7; hurdling: ∆ = +6.7%, d = 0.6) and cadence (flat: ∆ = 4.3%, d = 0.4; hurdling: ∆ = 3.9%, d = 0.5). For coefficients of variation, Judo group improved step length for flat (∆ = −20.9%, d = 0.6) and hurdling (∆ = −16.3%, d = 0.8) conditions, whereas control group showed a deterioration in the step length for the corridor condition (∆ = +22.3%, d = 0.7). | |
| Combs et al. [ | Berg balance scale | The traditional exercise group demonstrated significantly greater gains in balance confidence than the boxing group ( | |
| PDQL | |||
| Hu et al. [ | AVD scale | Compared with control group, patients who exercised showed improved cognitive function in immediate memory ( | |
| Chinese MMSE | |||
| Jansen & Dahmen-Zimmer [ | ZVT and ZS | No significant difference in cognitive improvement dependent on group between the three training conditions. However, a significant improvement was found in the emotional mental state measurement for the Karate group compared to the waiting control group. | |
| Emotional mental state and depressive pathology. | CES-D | ||
| Jansen et al. [ | TICS | Significant improvement ( | |
| MDBF | |||
| The mental rotation test | |||
| Lee et al. [ | 1RM a leg extension machine | There were significant ( | |
| ELISA kit | |||
| Brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity. | Non-invasive arterial tonometry with SphygmoCor | ||
| Pacheco Lopes et al. [ | Motor Task Sequence | Karate group shows significantly ( | |
| MMSE | |||
| Executive functioning, cognitive flexibility, lexical production and semantic memory. | Geriatric depression scale | ||
| Difficulties in prospective and retrospective memory. | Memory Complaint Questionnaire | ||
| Pliske et al. [ | kinematic system for motion analysis | It could be seen that all groups significantly improved ( | |
| kinematic system for motion analysis | |||
| Witte et al. [ | Chair stand test | Significant improvements ( | |
| Witte et al. [ | The rod test | Significant improvement ( | |
| The DemTect test |
ABC: Activities-specific balance confidence scale. ADL: The Activity of daily living. BDNF: Brain-derived neurotrophic factor. CES-D: The Center of Epidemiological Studies Depressions Scale, long version. ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. FES-I: The Falls Efficacy Scale-International. HADS: The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor-1. LOT-R: The Life Orientation Test–Revised. MDBF: The Multidimensional Mood Questionnaire. MMSE: The Mini-Mental State Examination. MMSE-DS: The Mini-Mental State Examination for dementia screening. PDQL: Parkinson’s disease quality of life scale. PRMQ: Prospective and Retrospective Memory Questionnaire. SF12: The Short form Health Survey. SF12v2: The Short form Health Survey, version 2. TICS: the Trier Inventory for Chronic Stress. VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor. ZS: Number–Symbol Test. ZVT: Number-connection Test. 1RM: one-repetition maximum test.