Santos-Lozano Alejandro, Pareja-Galeano Helios, Sanchis-Gomar Fabian, Quindós-Rubial Miguel, Fiuza-Luces Carmen, Cristi-Montero Carlos, Emanuele Enzo, Garatachea Nuria, Lucia Alejandro
Research Institute of Hospital 12 de Octubre ('i+12'), Madrid, Spain; GIDFYS, Department of Health Sciences, European University Miguel de Cervantes, Valladolid, Spain.
Research Institute of Hospital 12 de Octubre ('i+12'), Madrid, Spain; European University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Mayo Clin Proc. 2016 Aug;91(8):999-1020. doi: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2016.04.024.
To explore whether being physically active can decrease Alzheimer disease (AD) risk.
We conducted a meta-analysis of prospective observational cohort studies reporting the association between physical activity (PA) and incident AD. Relevant articles were identified by title and abstract in the electronic databases PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Scopus using the keywords Alzheimer, Alzheimer disease, Alzheimer's, Alzheimer's disease, physical activity, sport, exercise, sedentary, fitness, and combinations thereof for articles published in any language up to February 15, 2016. Criteria for consideration included division of the study cohort by PA levels and sample size specification for each PA level group, quantification (number) of persons who had development of AD, and PA assessment during time off work (not just work time). We followed the MOOSE (Meta-analyses of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) recommendations and used the Newcastle-Ottawa scale for study quality assessment.
Ten high-quality studies were included in meta-analysis I (23,345 participants). Follow-up ranged from 3.9 to 31 years, and the participants' age ranged from 70 to 80 years. The pooled odds ratio for development of AD in participants who were more vs less physically active was 0.65 (95% CI, 0.56-0.74; P<.001; no publication bias [P=.24] but with heterogeneity among studies [I(2)=31.32%]). We could identify participants' adherence to international PA recommendations in 5 studies, which constituted meta-analysis II (10,615 participants). The pooled odds ratio for development of AD in participants who were active vs those who were inactive was 0.60 (95% CI, 0.51-0.71; P<.001; no publication bias [P=.34] and no heterogeneity [I(2)=5.63%]).
Although the limitations of self-reported PA data must be considered, regular PA performed by elderly people might play a certain protective role against AD.
探讨身体活动是否可降低阿尔茨海默病(AD)风险。
我们对前瞻性观察性队列研究进行了一项荟萃分析,这些研究报告了身体活动(PA)与AD发病之间的关联。使用关键词“阿尔茨海默”“阿尔茨海默病”“阿尔茨海默氏症”“阿尔茨海默氏病”“身体活动”“运动”“锻炼”“久坐”“健康”及其组合,在电子数据库PubMed、ScienceDirect和Scopus中通过标题和摘要识别相关文章,检索截至2016年2月15日以任何语言发表的文章。纳入标准包括按PA水平对研究队列进行划分以及每个PA水平组的样本量规格、发生AD的人数量化(数量),以及非工作时间(不仅仅是工作时间)的PA评估。我们遵循MOOSE(流行病学观察性研究的荟萃分析)建议,并使用纽卡斯尔 - 渥太华量表进行研究质量评估。
荟萃分析I纳入了10项高质量研究(23,345名参与者)。随访时间为3.9至31年,参与者年龄在70至80岁之间。身体活动较多与较少的参与者发生AD的合并比值比为0.65(95%CI,0.56 - 0.74;P <.001;无发表偏倚[P =.24],但研究间存在异质性[I(2)=31.32%])。我们能够在5项研究中确定参与者对国际PA建议的依从性,这些研究构成了荟萃分析II(10,615名参与者)。活跃与不活跃的参与者发生AD的合并比值比为0.60(95%CI,0.51 - 0.71;P <.001;无发表偏倚[P =.34]且无异质性[I(2)=5.63%])。
尽管必须考虑自我报告的PA数据的局限性,但老年人进行规律的PA可能对AD起到一定的保护作用。