Department of Biostatistical Sciences, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC.
Brain and Metabolism Imaging in Chronic Disease Laboratory, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Baton Rouge, LA.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2018 Mar 14;73(4):484-491. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glx165.
Diabetes adversely impacts cognition. Lifestyle change can improve diabetes control and potentially improve cognition. We examined whether weight loss through reduced caloric intake and increased physical activity was associated with slower cognitive aging in older adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
The Look AHEAD randomized controlled clinical trial delivered 10 years of intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) that yielded long-term weight losses. During 5 years spanning the end of intervention and postintervention follow-up, repeated cognitive assessments were obtained in 1,091 individuals who had been assigned to ILI or a control condition of diabetes support and education (DSE). We compared the means and slopes of scores on cognitive testing over these repeated assessments.
Compared with DSE, assignment to ILI was associated with a -0.082 SD deficit in mean global cognitive function across repeated assessments (p = .010). However, overweight (body mass index [BMI] < 30 kg/m2) ILI participants had 0.099 (95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.006, 0.259) better mean global cognitive function compared with overweight DSE participants, while obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) ILI participants had -0.117 (-0.185, -0.049) SD worse mean composite cognitive function scores (interaction p = .014) compared to obese DSE participants. For both overweight and obese participants, cognitive decline was marginally (-0.014 SD/y overall) steeper for ILI participants (p = .068), with 95% CI for differences in slopes excluding 0 for measures of attention and memory.
The behavioral weight loss intervention was associated with small relative deficits in cognitive function among individuals who were obese and marginally greater cognitive decline overall compared to control. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00017953.
糖尿病会对认知能力产生不利影响。生活方式的改变可以改善糖尿病的控制,并有潜力改善认知能力。我们研究了通过减少热量摄入和增加体力活动来减肥是否与 2 型糖尿病老年患者认知衰老速度较慢有关。
前瞻性随机对照临床试验提供了 10 年的强化生活方式干预(ILI),从而实现了长期的体重减轻。在干预结束和干预后随访的 5 年内,1091 名被分配到 ILI 或糖尿病支持和教育(DSE)对照条件的个体进行了重复的认知评估。我们比较了这些重复评估中认知测试得分的平均值和斜率。
与 DSE 相比,分配到 ILI 与重复评估中的平均整体认知功能平均下降 0.082 个标准差(p =.010)。然而,超重(体重指数[BMI] < 30 kg/m2)ILI 参与者的平均整体认知功能比超重 DSE 参与者好 0.099(95%置信区间[CI]:-0.006,0.259),而肥胖(BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2)ILI 参与者的平均复合认知功能评分差 0.117(0.185,-0.049)个标准差(交互作用 p =.014)与肥胖 DSE 参与者相比。对于超重和肥胖参与者,ILI 参与者的认知下降速度略有加快(总体为-0.014 SD/y,p =.068),95%CI 排除了 0 对于注意力和记忆测试的斜率差异。
与对照组相比,行为体重减轻干预与肥胖个体的认知功能相对较小的相对缺陷以及整体认知能力下降幅度略大有关。临床试验注册:NCT00017953。