Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, London, UK.
Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, London, UK.
Lancet Healthy Longev. 2023 Jul;4(7):e345-e353. doi: 10.1016/S2666-7568(23)00083-1.
Physical activity and sleep duration are key factors associated with cognitive function and dementia risk. How physical activity and sleep interact to influence cognitive ageing is not well explored. We aimed to examine the associations of combinations of physical activity and sleep duration with 10-year cognitive trajectories.
In this longitudinal study, we analysed data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing collected between Jan 1, 2008, and July 31, 2019, with follow-up interviews every 2 years. Participants were cognitively healthy adults aged at least 50 years at baseline. Participants were asked about physical activity and nightly sleep duration at baseline. At each interview, episodic memory was assessed using immediate and delayed recall tasks and verbal fluency using an animal naming task; scores were standardised and averaged to produce a composite cognitive score. We used linear mixed models to examine independent and joint associations of physical activity (lower physical activity or higher physical activity, based on a score taking into account frequency and intensity of physical activity) and sleep duration (short [<6 h], optimal [6-8 h], or long [>8 h]) with cognitive performance at baseline, after 10 years of follow-up, and the rate of cognitive decline.
We included 8958 respondents aged 50-95 years at baseline (median follow-up 10 years [IQR 2-10]). Lower physical activity and suboptimal sleep were independently associated with worse cognitive performance; short sleep was also associated with faster cognitive decline. At baseline, participants with higher physical activity and optimal sleep had higher cognitive scores than all combinations of lower physical activity and sleep categories (eg, difference between those with higher physical activity and optimal sleep vs those with lower physical activity and short sleep at baseline age 50 years was 0·14 SDs [95% CI 0·05-0·24]). We found no difference in baseline cognitive performance between sleep categories within the higher physical activity category. Those with higher physical activity and short sleep had faster rates of cognitive decline than those with higher physical activity and optimal sleep, such that their scores at 10 years were commensurate with those who reported low physical activity, regardless of sleep duration (eg, difference in cognitive performance after 10 years of follow-up between those with higher physical and optimal sleep and those with lower physical activity and short sleep was 0·20 SDs [0·08-0·33]; difference between those with higher physical activity and optimal sleep and those with lower physical activity and short sleep was 0·22 SDs [0·11-0·34]).
The baseline cognitive benefit associated with more frequent, higher intensity physical activity was insufficient to ameliorate the more rapid cognitive decline associated with short sleep. Physical activity interventions should also consider sleep habits to maximise benefis of physical activity for long-term cognitive health.
UK Economic and Social Research Council.
体力活动和睡眠时间是与认知功能和痴呆风险相关的关键因素。体力活动和睡眠如何相互作用影响认知老化还没有得到很好的探索。我们旨在研究体力活动和睡眠时间的组合与 10 年认知轨迹的关系。
在这项纵向研究中,我们分析了 2008 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 7 月 31 日期间在英国老龄化纵向研究中收集的数据,每两年进行一次随访访谈。参与者是基线时年龄至少 50 岁的认知健康成年人。参与者在基线时被问及体力活动和每晚的睡眠时间。在每次访谈中,使用即时和延迟回忆任务评估情景记忆,使用动物命名任务评估语言流畅性;分数被标准化并平均,以产生一个综合认知分数。我们使用线性混合模型来检查体力活动(较低或较高的体力活动,基于考虑体力活动频率和强度的分数)和睡眠时间(较短[<6 小时]、最佳[6-8 小时]或较长[>8 小时])与基线时、10 年随访后以及认知下降速度的认知表现的独立和联合关联。
我们纳入了 8958 名基线时年龄在 50-95 岁的参与者(中位随访时间为 10 年[IQR 2-10])。较低的体力活动和睡眠不足与认知表现较差有关;睡眠时间短也与认知衰退较快有关。在基线时,与较低的体力活动和所有睡眠类别相比,较高的体力活动和最佳睡眠的参与者具有更高的认知分数(例如,基线时 50 岁时那些体力活动较高和睡眠最佳的人与那些体力活动较低和睡眠较短的人的差异为 0.14 标准差[95%CI 0.05-0.24])。我们在较高的体力活动类别内没有发现睡眠类别与基线认知表现之间的差异。与较高的体力活动和最佳睡眠相比,较高的体力活动和较短的睡眠的人认知衰退速度更快,以至于他们在 10 年后的认知分数与那些报告体力活动较低的人相当,无论睡眠持续时间如何(例如,10 年后随访后那些体力活动较高和睡眠最佳的人与那些体力活动较低和睡眠较短的人的认知表现差异为 0.20 标准差[0.08-0.33];那些体力活动较高和睡眠最佳的人与那些体力活动较低和睡眠较短的人的认知表现差异为 0.22 标准差[0.11-0.34])。
与更频繁、更高强度的体力活动相关的基线认知益处不足以减轻与睡眠时间短相关的更快认知衰退。体力活动干预还应考虑睡眠习惯,以最大限度地提高体力活动对长期认知健康的益处。
英国经济和社会研究理事会。