| Literature DB >> 35017859 |
Akshay Anand1,2,3, Abdul Ghani4, Kanupriya Sharma1, Gurkeerat Kaur1, Radhika Khosla1, Chandra Devi1, Vivek Podder5, Madhava S Sivapuram6, Kalyan Maity7, Harmandeep Kaur8.
Abstract
Conflicts and humanitarian crises lead to serious mental health disorders, including depression, anxiety, stress, and cognitive decline. Exposure to these circumstances in early life can lead to the development of disorders such as mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and Alzheimer's disease (AD), for which no treatments are available. In this review, various research papers have been compiled to develop an understanding about mental health of population affected due to wars and conflicts and how stress and depression can accelerate the development of dementia and AD. Due to failure of drugs in the treatment of dementia and AD, yoga and mindfulness-based approach has been proposed for future investigations. Although studies have shown that yoga and mindfulness can be helpful in the management of stress, anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder in the war-afflicted areas, limited mechanistic studies in yoga and mindfulness remain the chief cause precluding its clinical application in such warzones. The molecular studies in the field of yoga can be undertaken by targeting these warzones. This review provides a scientific evaluation of mind-body techniques as a justification for mental health rehabilitation in the war-afflicted zones in face of failed clinical trials for various drugs. This may help reduce the risk of developing dementia and AD in this susceptible population. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive impairment; dementia; memory; stress; war-prone area; yoga
Year: 2021 PMID: 35017859 PMCID: PMC8691442 DOI: 10.4103/ijoy.ijoy_60_21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Yoga ISSN: 0973-6131
Representation of the prevalence of anxiety, depression posttraumatic stress disorder, and later development of dementia population exposed to war related conditions
| Pathology | Worldwide prevalence rate (percentage) of anxiety, depression, PTSD, and dementia in population exposed to war-related conditions | Citation |
|---|---|---|
| Depression | 51% in Cambodians | [ |
| 42% in Yugoslavians, Turkish, and Iraqi | [ | |
| 40% in Southeast Asians | [ | |
| 38.9% in Kurdish and Vietnamese | [ | |
| 38.8% in Guatemalan | [ | |
| 34.3% in Yugoslavians | [ | |
| 31.7% in Bosnians | [ | |
| 29.3% in Afghans, Iranians, and Somalis | [ | |
| 23% in Somalis | [ | |
| 20.8% in Vietnamese | [ | |
| 16% in Sudanese | [ | |
| 8.8% particularly in Vietnamese | [ | |
| Anxiety | 88% in Cambodians | [ |
| 54.4% in Guatemalan | [ | |
| 45% in Cambodians | [ | |
| 40.5% in Bosnians | [ | |
| 35% in Southeast Asians | [ | |
| 27.7% in Afghans, Iranians, and Somalis | [ | |
| 25.0% in Kurdish and Vietnamese | [ | |
| 20.3% in Vietnamese | [ | |
| PTSD | 75.4% in Sri Lankan Tamils | [ |
| 66.6% in Bosnians | [ | |
| 44.2% in Yugoslavians, Turkish, and Iraqi | [ | |
| 37.8% in Somalis and Rwandans | [ | |
| 33.1% in Yugoslavians | [ | |
| 31.3% in Kurdish and Vietnamese | [ | |
| 22.2% in Somalis | [ | |
| 14% in Southeast Asians | [ | |
| 13% in Sudanese (Australia) | [ | |
| 11.8% in Guatemalan | [ | |
| 10.6% in Afghans, Iranians, and Somalis | [ | |
| Dementia | During follow-up, 17.2% of war veterans were ascertained to have newly diagnosed Dementia in US | [ |
| 13% of PTSD population developed dementia in a study in Italy | [ | |
| War veterans with PTSD had higher prevalence of dementia in comparison to veterans without PTSD, Houston, Texas | [ | |
| PTSD was associated with increased risk of dementia over an 8 years of follow-up and two-fold higher risk of developing dementia in those with both depression and PTSD, in San Francisco, USA | [ |
PSTD=Posttraumatic stress disorder
Studies from various countries, population of which has stress, posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, dementia etc., due to exposure to war related conditions
| War prone regions | Aim of the study | Outcome of the study | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iraq | PTSD and HTQ were administered for the caregiver and the oldest child of the family | PTSD was reported in 87% of the children and 60% of their caregivers | [ |
| Syria | To examine the prevalence of PTSD and to explore its relation to socio economic variables among Syrian refugees | 71% of them had PTSD in the sample, which shows that PTSD is an important health issue among the Syrian refugees | [ |
| Afganistan | National estimates of Afghan population aged 15 years or above | 67.5% of the total recruited population had symptoms of depression. Symptoms of PTSD, anxiety, depression were high in the overall survey | [ |
| Libya | Prediction of the impact of conflict in the country on the population | The proportion of comorbidity of PTSD with depression among general population was estimated to be around 50% | [ |
| India | Study amongst the victims of bomb blast in Jammu and Kashmir area of the country | 35.4% of the victims reported psychiatric morbidity. Psychiatric diagnosis reported that 12.9% had PTSD, 9.6% had depression and 6.4% had dissociative amnesia | [ |
| Palestine | Study conducted on children from 10–19 years of age for the prevalence of PTSD | 32.7% children suffered from PTSD, 49.2% from moderate PTSD, 15.6% mild PTSD and 2.5% had no signs of PTSD | [ |
| Pakistan | Prevalence of PTSD, anxiety and depression in Pakistani workers who had been exposed to terror attacks | Around 15% of them showed PTSD and about 11%–15% reported high levels of depression and anxiety | [ |
| Kuopio, Finland | Study conducted on men who had experienced childhood stress due to emigrating from war areas and other reasons | A positive correlation of childhood stress with late life dementia was found | [ |
PSTD=Posttraumatic stress disorder, HTQ=Harvard trauma quest
Failure of drugs in the clinical trials for neurodegenerative diseases
| Name of the drugs | Phase of trail fail | Years | Reasons | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aβ antigens (AN1792; active vaccination) | Phase I | 2006 | Clearance of amyloid plaques was observed but it did not prevent progressive neurodegeneration | [ |
| Tarenfurbil, the R-enantiomer of the NSAID, flurbiprofen | Phase III | 2008 | Failed to penetrate the blood–brain barrier in enough concentrations | [ |
| Tramiprosate | Phase III | 2009 | No consistent improvement in cognitive performance | [ |
| Solanezumab | Phase III | 2012 | Lack of efficacy in improving the primary outcomes, i.e., cognition and function | [ |
| C-terminal anti-Ab. antibody ponezumab | Phase II | 2010 | No efficacious results were found | [ |
| Aducanumab | Phase III | 2019 | No data available | [ |
Phase I clinical trial aims to examine the safe dosage of a drug with the few or no side effects. The drug is tested in a small group of 15– 30 patients, Phase II trials aims to the further safety if a drug has efficacy. Phase II trials are in larger groups of patients compared to Phase I trials, Phase III trials compare a new drug to standard care of drug. These also assess the side effects of any drug. Phase III trials enroll more than 100 patients, Phase IV trials test new drugs approved by the FDA. FDA=Food and drug administration, NSAID= Nonsteroidal Anti Inflammatory Drugs
Several mind–body techniques administered to the war-affected people as an alternative intervention for reducing stress-induced cognitive problems and other associated factors
| Affected areas | Intervention | Aim of the study | Outcome of the study | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kosovo | MBSG | To determine whether MBSG program decreases symptoms of PTSD in war-traumatized high school students | Students in the intervention group had significantly lower PTSD symptom scores than those in the wait-list control group | [ |
| Palestine | MBSG program | To assess the effectiveness of 10 session long MBSGs program for PTSD, depression, anxiety, and QOL to war-traumatized Palestinian adults | Intervention group showed significant reduction in PTSD, depression, and anxiety symptoms and QOL improvement, and maintained at 10 months of follow-up | [ |
| Congo | TM | To assess whether TM practice can reduce PTS symptoms in Congolese refugees | TM practice significantly reduced PTSD symptoms in these refugees | [ |
| Gaza | Mind body skills | Assessment of symptoms of PTSD and depression on hopelessness children and adolescents in Gaza | After 7 months of follow-up, improvements in total PTSD and depression score were largely maintained and decreased sense of hopelessness was maintained despite ongoing violence and economic hardships | [ |
MBSG=Mind–body skills group program, TM=Transcendental meditation, QOL=Quality Of Life, PSTD=Posttraumatic stress disorder, PTS= Post Traumatic Stress
The list of some yoga protocols used across the world for the management of anxiety, depression, stress, and dementia which are also the health problems faced by people exposed to war related conditions
| Name of protocol | Protocol | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iyenger yoga and coherent breathing | 90 min=yoga postures, transition and deep relaxation followed by coherent breathing | Reduction in depressive symptoms after 12 weeks of Iyenger yoga and coherent breathing intervention | [ |
| Yoga breath intervention | 8 h program=4 days | Relieved psychological distress in treatment group compared to control group after 6 weeks of the intervention | [ |
| Multicomponent yoga breath | Modified Sudarshan Kriya | Provided significant improvement in population with severe PTSD, alcohol abuse, and dependence on disability status | [ |
| A yoga stress reduction intervention | 90-min yoga protocol includes | Significant improvement in perceived stress, psychological, behavioral, and physical symptoms of stress after 10 weeks of yoga intervention | [ |
| Kundalini yoga | 60-min | Kundalini yoga improves executive functioning, depressed mood, and resilience with greater and sustained improvement in mood compared to memory enhancement training group | [ |
| A yoga program for cognitive enhancement | Seated mindfulness scan and set positive affirmation | An improvement in working memory functioning and enhance attentive mindfulness after 6 yoga sessions | [ |
| Yoga for memory enhancement training, in patients with clinical dementia rating scale score (<0.5) | The content and structure of the class including Kundalini yoga session | After 12 weeks of yoga effective improvement in verbal memory was correlated with increased functional connectivity in brain networks | [ |
| Yoga for physical and mental health of elder adults with dementia | Warm up (20 min) | 12 weeks of yoga training program improved physical and mental health than nonparticipating group. Further, the depression state and problem behaviors were also significantly reduced | [ |
SK=Sudarshan Kriya, PSTD=Posttraumatic stress disorder