Jehu Deborah A, Pottayil Faheem, Dong Yanbin, Zhu Haidong, Sams Richard, Young Lufei
Department of Community & Behavioral Health Sciences, Institute of Public and Preventative Health, Augusta University, Augusta, GA, USA.
Georgia Prevention Institute, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University, Augusta, GA, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2025 Mar 17:JAD230594. doi: 10.3233/JAD-230594.
BackgroundPhysical activity preserves cognitive function in people without dementia, but the relationship between physical activity and cognitive domains among people living with dementia is unclear.ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to explore the association between physical activity and cognition domains among people living with dementia.MethodsParticipants living with dementia in residential care facilities (complete case analysis: = 24/42) completed a battery of cognitive tests (: Montreal Cognitive Assessment; : Trail-Making Test, Digit Span Forward Test; : Benton Judgement of Line Orientation Test; : Boston Naming Test; : Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test; : Digit Symbol Substitution Test). Participants wore an actigraphy monitor on their non-dominant wrist over seven days. We conducted a linear regression for total physical activity (independent variable) with race (white/black), fall risk (Morse Fall Scale), and the number of comorbidities (Functional Comorbidities Index) as covariates, and cognitive tests as variables of interest.ResultsParticipants were primarily male (75%), white (87.5%), and 50%had unspecified dementia (Alzheimer's disease: 33%). Greater physical activity was associated with poorer global cognition, better executive function, and better learning and memory ( < 0.05). Physical activity was not related to visuospatial perception, language, or complex attention.ConclusionsPhysical activity may preserve executive function and learning and memory among people living with dementia. Wandering is more common in later stages of dementia, which may explain greater physical activity observed with lower global cognition. Regularly assessing physical activity may be useful in screening and monitoring cognitive changes.
背景
身体活动可维持无痴呆症人群的认知功能,但痴呆症患者的身体活动与认知领域之间的关系尚不清楚。
目的
本研究的目的是探讨痴呆症患者的身体活动与认知领域之间的关联。
方法
居住在养老机构的痴呆症患者(完整病例分析:=24/42)完成了一系列认知测试(:蒙特利尔认知评估;:连线测验、数字广度顺背测验;:本顿直线方向判断测验;:波士顿命名测验;:雷伊听觉词语学习测验;:数字符号替换测验)。参与者在非优势手腕上佩戴活动记录仪7天。我们以种族(白人/黑人)、跌倒风险(莫尔斯跌倒量表)和共病数量(功能共病指数)作为协变量,以认知测试作为感兴趣的变量,对总身体活动(自变量)进行线性回归分析。
结果
参与者主要为男性(75%)、白人(87.5%),50%患有未明确的痴呆症(阿尔茨海默病:33%)。更多的身体活动与较差的整体认知、较好的执行功能以及较好的学习和记忆相关(<0.05)。身体活动与视觉空间感知、语言或复杂注意力无关。
结论
身体活动可能维持痴呆症患者的执行功能以及学习和记忆。徘徊在痴呆症后期更为常见,这可能解释了整体认知较低时观察到的更多身体活动。定期评估身体活动可能有助于筛查和监测认知变化。