Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Exercise may improve thinking in sedentary seniors with cognitive decline

- By Lisa Rapaport

(Reuters Health) - - Older adults who already have some cognitive impairment, but not dementia, may find their thinking skills improve when they start doing aerobic exercise like walking or cycling a few times a week, a small experiment suggests.

Researcher­s studied 160 adults, age 65 on average, all sedentary and all with some cognitive impairment but not dementia. Participan­ts were randomly assigned to one of four groups: aerobic exercise three times a week; nutritiona­l counseling and a heart-healthy diet; both the exercise and nutrition counseling; or a control group that didn’t change their diet or exercise habits.

After six months, people who exercised scored higher on thinking tests than they did at the start of the study, an improvemen­t equivalent to reversing nearly nine years of aging, researcher­s report in Neurology.

“There are currently no proven medical therapies to stop or reverse age-related cognitive decline, and these lifestyle changes have the potential to delay the onset of dementia for years,” said lead study author James Blumenthal of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina.

In particular, exercise improved thinking skills known as executive function, which involves a person’s ability to regulate their behaviour, pay attention, organise ideas and achieve goals. Exercise did not, however, seem to improve memory.

Participan­ts assigned to exercise had three weekly sessions of 45 minutes, including a 10- minute warmup followed by 35 minutes of activities like walking, jogging, or cycling. For the first three months, they worked out at 70 percent of their maximum heart rate, working up to 85 percent for the second three months.

People in the nutritiona­l counseling group were taught how to follow the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertensi­on (DASH) diet, which is a low-sodium, high-fiber diet rich in fruits and vegetables, beans, nuts, low fat dairy products, whole grains and lean meats.

The DASH diet alone didn’t appear to impact thinking skills. But people with the greatest cognitive improvemen­ts were those in the group assigned both to exercise and follow the DASH diet, suggesting the diet might enhance the effects of exercise.

People in the control group didn’t start exercising or adopt a DASH diet and were assigned only to receive health education classes. At the end of the six months, they showed no improvemen­ts in cognitive function. In fact, on average, their function declined slightly, by the equivalent of six months of aging.

Beyond its small size, one limitation of the study is that it was conducted at a single site, and results might be different elsewhere, the authors note.

Still, the results underscore the importance of lifestyle changes for older adults with cognitive impairment, said Sandra Bond Chapman, founder of the BrainHealt­h center at the University of Texas at Dallas.

 ??  ?? Pensioners read a free newspaper as they sit on public benches in Madrid October 2, 2013. Reuters/Susana Vera
Pensioners read a free newspaper as they sit on public benches in Madrid October 2, 2013. Reuters/Susana Vera

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