Participants with vascular cognitive impairment, sometimes called
vascular dementia, who walked three hours per week for six months
had improved reaction times and other signs of improved brain
function, the Canadian team reports in British Journal of Sports
Medicine.
Vascular cognitive impairment, or VCI, refers to mildly impaired
thinking or more advanced dementia that’s due to the same kinds of
blood vessel damage seen with heart disease elsewhere in the body.
It is the second most common cause of dementia after Alzheimer’s
disease.
“It is well established that regular aerobic exercise improves
cardiovascular health and cerebrovascular health,” the study’s
senior author Teresa Liu-Ambrose told Reuters Health in an email.
“More specifically, it reduces one’s risk of developing chronic
conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes (type II), and high
cholesterol. These chronic conditions have a negative impact on the
brain - likely through compromised blood flow to the brain,” said
Liu-Ambrose, a researcher with the Aging, Mobility, and Cognitive
Neuroscience Lab at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
The brain is a highly metabolic organ and to keep it healthy, it
requires good blood flow to deliver the necessary nutrients and
oxygen to its tissues, she added.
“It is worth noting that in our study, reduced blood pressure
(secondary to exercise) was associated with improved cognitive
function,” Liu-Ambrose said.
Aerobic exercise may also benefit the brain by increasing growth
factors, which are substances made by the body that promote cell
growth, differentiation and survival, she said.
Liu-Ambrose and colleagues randomly assigned 38 older adults with
mild VCI to one of two groups. One group followed an aerobic
training program consisting of three one-hour walking classes each
week for six weeks, while the other group continued with their usual
care. In addition, both groups were given information about vascular
cognitive impairment and tips for eating a healthier diet.
Before the exercise program began and at the end of six weeks, all
the participants also had functional MRI brain scans and other tests
that measured neural activity and cognitive ability.
People in the aerobic training group had significant improvements in
their reaction times on the cognitive tests, and showed changes in
their brain activity that made them resemble healthy brains more.
The comparison group showed no changes.
Overall, exercise appears to be a promising strategy for promoting
cognitive health in older adults, Liu-Ambrose said.
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“While more research is needed to better understand how it brings
about its benefits and what factors may impact the degree of benefit
observed, there is minimal negative consequence of exercising,” she
said.
Liu-Ambrose said she doesn’t know if exercise can actually prevent
VCI because there have been no studies to determine that. “However,
population based studies do suggest that physical activity does
reduce the risk of developing VCI. Moreover, as mentioned earlier,
aerobic exercise is very effective in reducing vascular risk factors
associated with VCI, such as high blood pressure.”
The study was small, and because participants had to be able to walk
for up to an hour, it’s possible they were physically healthier than
average, the authors note. The socializing involved in the walking
classes might have also had some effect, they add.
“Given the small sample size, one needs to be cautious about
interpreting the results of this pilot study. However, it is
encouraging to see that the six-month aerobic exercise program
improved certain aspects of cognition and showed changes on
functional brain imaging,” said Dr. Joe Verghese, director of the
Montefiore Einstein Center for the Aging Brain at Montefiore Medical
Center in New York.
“The effect of exercise in this, and other studies seems to be on
improving executive functions, which are required for planning,
thinking and judgment,” Verghese, who wasn’t involved in the study,
said by email.
“The findings, if confirmed in larger studies, may have implications
in advising exercise in older patients with vascular risk factors
for brain protection,” Verghese said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2pXErCo British Journal of Sports Medicine,
online April 21, 2017.
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