Rice Paige E, Thumuluri Deepthi, Barnstaple Rebecca, Fanning Jason, Laurita-Spanglet Jessie, Soriano Christina T, Hugenschmidt Christina E
Department of Health and Exercise Science, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Section on Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2025 Jun;105(4):1183-1221. doi: 10.3233/JAD-230741. Epub 2024 Jul 12.
BackgroundDance combines cultural and aesthetic elements with behaviors important for brain health, including physical activity, social engagement, and cognitive challenge. Therefore, dance could positively impact public health given the rapidly aging population, increasing incidence of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias, and lack of uptake of exercise in many older adults. Despite a high volume of literature, existing literature does not support evidence-based guidelines for dance to support healthy aging.ObjectiveTo conduct a scoping review of the dance intervention literature in older adults and provide information to facilitate a more consistent approach among scientists in designing dance interventions for older adults that stimulate physical and neurocognitive health adaptations.MethodsStudy characteristics (sample size, population, study design, outcomes, intervention details) were ascertained from 112 separate studies of dance reported in 127 papers that reported outcomes important for brain health (cardiorespiratory fitness, balance and mobility, cognition, mood, and quality of life).ResultsHigh heterogeneity across studies was evident. Class frequency ranged from < 1 to 5 classes per week, class length from 30-120 minutes, and intervention duration from 2 weeks to 18 months. Studies often did not randomize participants, had small (< 30) sample sizes, and used varied comparator conditions. Over 50 tests of cognition, 40 dance forms, and 30 tests of mobility were identified.ConclusionsBased on these results, important future directions are establishing common data elements, developing intervention mapping and mechanistic modeling, and testing dosing parameters to strengthen and focus trial design of future studies and generate evidence-based guidelines for dance.
背景
舞蹈将文化和美学元素与对大脑健康至关重要的行为相结合,包括体育活动、社交参与和认知挑战。因此,鉴于人口迅速老龄化、阿尔茨海默病及相关痴呆症的发病率不断上升,以及许多老年人缺乏运动,舞蹈可能对公众健康产生积极影响。尽管有大量文献,但现有文献并不支持基于证据的舞蹈指南以促进健康老龄化。
目的
对老年人舞蹈干预文献进行范围综述,并提供信息,以便科学家在设计促进身体和神经认知健康适应的老年人舞蹈干预措施时采用更一致的方法。
方法
从127篇论文中报告的112项关于舞蹈的独立研究中确定研究特征(样本量、人群、研究设计、结果、干预细节),这些论文报告了对大脑健康重要的结果(心肺适能、平衡和活动能力、认知、情绪和生活质量)。
结果
各研究之间存在明显的高度异质性。课程频率从每周<1节到5节不等,课程时长从30 - 120分钟,干预持续时间从2周至18个月。研究通常未对参与者进行随机分组,样本量小(<30),且使用了不同 的对照条件。共识别出50多项认知测试、40种舞蹈形式和30项活动能力测试。
结论
基于这些结果,未来重要的方向是建立通用数据元素、开发干预映射和机制模型,以及测试剂量参数,以加强和聚焦未来研究的试验设计,并生成基于证据的舞蹈指南。