Department of Basic Psychology II, UNED, Madrid, Spain.
University of Poitiers, CNRS, Paris, France.
Syst Rev. 2024 Apr 1;13(1):98. doi: 10.1186/s13643-024-02517-0.
Executive functions (EFs) and episodic memory are fundamental components of cognition that deteriorate with age and are crucial for independent living. While numerous reviews have explored the effect of exercise on these components in old age, these reviews screened and analyzed selected older adult populations, or specific exercise modes, thus providing only limited answers to the fundamental question on the effect of exercise on cognition in old age. This article describes the protocol for a systematic review and multilevel meta-analytic study aiming at evaluating the effectiveness of different types of chronic exercise in improving and/or maintaining EFs and long-term episodic memory in older adults.
The study protocol was written in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Several databases will be searched. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) conducted in older adults aged ≥ 60 years providing any kind of planned, structured, and repetitive exercise interventions, and EFs and/or episodic memory measures as outcomes, published in English in peer-reviewed journals and doctoral dissertations will be included. Two independent reviewers will screen the selected articles, while a third reviewer will resolve possible conflicts. The Cochrane risk-of-bias tool will be used to assess the quality of the studies. Finally, data will be extracted from the selected articles, and the formal method of combining individual data from the selected studies will be applied using a random effect multilevel meta-analysis. The data analysis will be conducted with the metafor package in R.
This review will synthesize the existing evidence and pinpoint gaps existing in the literature on the effects of exercise on EFs and episodic memory in healthy and unhealthy older adults. Findings from this meta-analysis will help to design effective exercise interventions for older adults to improve and/or maintain EFs and episodic memory. Its results will be useful for many researchers and professionals working with older adults and their families.
PROSPERO CRD42022367111.
执行功能(EFs)和情景记忆是认知的基本组成部分,随着年龄的增长而恶化,对独立生活至关重要。虽然有许多评论探讨了运动对老年人这些组成部分的影响,但这些评论筛选和分析了选定的老年人群体,或特定的运动模式,因此仅为运动对老年人认知的影响这一基本问题提供了有限的答案。本文描述了一项系统评价和多层次荟萃分析研究的方案,旨在评估不同类型的慢性运动对改善和/或维持老年人执行功能和长期情景记忆的有效性。
研究方案按照系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)指南编写。将搜索多个数据库。将纳入在年龄≥60 岁的老年人中进行的、提供任何种类的计划、结构化和重复运动干预措施以及执行功能和/或情景记忆测量结果的随机对照试验(RCT),发表在同行评议期刊和博士论文中的英文文章。两名独立的审查员将筛选选定的文章,而第三名审查员将解决可能存在的冲突。将使用 Cochrane 偏倚风险工具评估研究的质量。最后,将从选定的文章中提取数据,并使用随机效应多层次荟萃分析应用组合选定研究中个体数据的正式方法。数据分析将在 R 语言中的 metafor 包中进行。
本综述将综合现有证据,并指出健康和不健康老年人中关于运动对执行功能和情景记忆影响的文献中的空白。荟萃分析的结果将有助于为老年人设计有效的运动干预措施,以改善和/或维持执行功能和情景记忆。其结果将对许多与老年人及其家属合作的研究人员和专业人员有用。
PROSPERO CRD42022367111。