Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Department of Kinesiology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2019;67(2):671-684. doi: 10.3233/JAD-180728.
Exercise training has been associated with greater cerebral blood flow (CBF) in cognitively normal older adults (CN). Alterations in CBF, including compensatory perfusion in the prefrontal cortex, may facilitate changes to the brain's neural infrastructure.
To examine the effects of a 12-week aerobic exercise intervention on resting CBF and cognition in CN and those with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). We hypothesized individuals with MCI (versus CN) would exhibit greater whole brain CBF at baseline and that exercise would mitigate these differences. We also expected CBF changes to parallel cognitive improvements.
Before and after a 12-week exercise intervention, 18 CN and 17 MCI participants (aged 61-88) underwent aerobic fitness testing, neuropsychological assessment, and an MRI scan. Perfusion-weighted images were collected using a GE 3T MR system. Repeated measures analyses of covariance were used to test within- and between-group differences over time, followed by post-hoc analyses to examine links between CBF changes and cognitive improvement.
At baseline, individuals with MCI (versus CN) exhibited significantly elevated perfusion in the left insula. Twelve weeks of aerobic exercise reversed this discrepancy. Additionally, exercise improved working memory (measured by the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test) and verbal fluency (measured by the Controlled Oral Word Association Test) and differentially altered CBF depending on cognitive status. Among those with MCI, decreased CBF in the left insula and anterior cingulate cortex was associated with improved verbal fluency.
Exercise training alters CBF and improves cognitive performance in older adults with and without cognitive impairment. Future studies must evaluate the mediating effects of CBF on the association between exercise training and cognition.
运动训练与认知正常的老年人(CN)的大脑血流(CBF)增加有关。CBF 的变化,包括前额叶皮层的代偿性灌注,可能促进大脑神经基础结构的改变。
研究 12 周有氧运动干预对认知正常和轻度认知障碍(MCI)老年人静息 CBF 和认知的影响。我们假设 MCI 个体(与 CN 相比)在基线时会表现出更高的全脑 CBF,而运动可以减轻这些差异。我们还期望 CBF 的变化与认知的改善平行。
在 12 周的运动干预前后,18 名 CN 和 17 名 MCI 参与者(年龄 61-88 岁)接受了有氧运动能力测试、神经心理学评估和 MRI 扫描。使用 GE 3T MR 系统采集灌注加权图像。采用重复测量协方差分析来测试组内和组间随时间的差异,然后进行事后分析,以检验 CBF 变化与认知改善之间的关系。
在基线时,MCI 个体(与 CN 相比)左侧岛叶的灌注明显升高。12 周的有氧运动逆转了这一差异。此外,运动改善了工作记忆(通过 Rey 听觉言语学习测试测量)和言语流畅性(通过受控口头单词联想测试测量),并根据认知状态的不同改变了 CBF。在 MCI 患者中,左侧岛叶和前扣带皮层的 CBF 减少与言语流畅性的改善有关。
运动训练改变了认知正常和认知障碍老年人的 CBF,并改善了他们的认知表现。未来的研究必须评估 CBF 在运动训练与认知之间的关联中的中介作用。