Hollamby Alice, Davelaar Eddy J, Cadar Dorina
Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College, University of London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Public Health. 2017 Dec 21;5:346. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00346. eCollection 2017.
Physical fitness (PF) has been associated with improved cognition in older age, but less is known about its effects on different cognitive domains in individuals diagnosed with dementia. We explored the associations between PF and cognitive performance in 40 healthy elderly and 30 individuals with dementia. Participants completed a battery of standardized cognitive tests (Mini-Mental State Exam, Verbal Fluency, Prospective and Retrospective Memory Questionnaire, Clock Drawing, and California Verbal Learning Test) and were classified into high versus low levels of PF based on their score on the Physical Fitness Questionnaire. Analyses took into account age, gender, education, occupation, head injury, Internet use, brain training, and past levels of exercise and revealed overall benefits of PF, in particular for the people with dementia. Discriminant analysis showed high accuracy of reclassification, with most errors being due to the misclassification of dementia cases as healthy when they had high PF. The first discriminant function accounted for 83% of the variance. Using individual estimates of this function, which reflected global cognitive performance, confirmed the beneficial role of PF in dementia, even when taking into account age, past level of exercise, and the number of years since the dementia diagnosis. Finally, univariate analyses confirmed the differential sensitivity of the cognitive tests, with MMSE and clock drawing showing reliable interaction effects. This work shows that PF is associated with a reduced level of cognitive deterioration expected with dementia, especially in executive functioning and provides empirical support for the cognitive benefits of interventions promoting PF for individuals with dementia.
身体健康(PF)与老年人认知能力的改善有关,但对于其对痴呆症患者不同认知领域的影响知之甚少。我们探讨了40名健康老年人和30名痴呆症患者的PF与认知表现之间的关联。参与者完成了一系列标准化认知测试(简易精神状态检查表、语言流畅性测试、前瞻性和回顾性记忆问卷、画钟测试以及加利福尼亚语言学习测试),并根据他们在体能问卷上的得分分为高水平PF组和低水平PF组。分析考虑了年龄、性别、教育程度、职业、头部受伤情况、互联网使用情况、大脑训练以及过去的运动水平,结果显示PF总体上有益,尤其是对痴呆症患者。判别分析显示重新分类的准确率很高,大多数错误是由于痴呆症患者在PF水平较高时被误分类为健康人群。第一个判别函数解释了83%的方差。使用反映整体认知表现的该函数的个体估计值,证实了PF在痴呆症中的有益作用,即使考虑到年龄、过去的运动水平以及自痴呆症诊断以来的年数。最后,单变量分析证实了认知测试的不同敏感性,简易精神状态检查表和画钟测试显示出可靠的交互作用。这项研究表明,PF与痴呆症预期的认知衰退水平降低有关,尤其是在执行功能方面,并为促进痴呆症患者PF的干预措施所带来的认知益处提供了实证支持。