» Articles » PMID: 23137935

Correlation Between Moderate Daily Physical Activity and Neurocognitive Variability in Healthy Elderly People

Overview
Specialty Geriatrics
Date 2012 Nov 10
PMID 23137935
Citations 17
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Recent studies have reported that moderate physical activity in daily life contributes to maintenance of a proper state of cognitive function in elderly individuals. The present study investigated the validity of correlations between moderate physical activity and cognitive function using more objective and detailed assessments of both physical activity and neurocognitive function. Participants comprised 72 healthy elderly individuals who wore an electronic accelerometer during waking hours for 3 months. This device recorded the number of steps per day as well as the duration of each intensity level in daily life; levels 1-3 were the equivalent of easy-paced walking (light activity), while levels 4-6 corresponded to brisk walking (moderate activity). To estimate executive cognitive ability in healthy elderly individuals, performance variability of executive control was examined with a task-switching reaction time (RT) test measuring intra-individual variability (IIV) in RTs. In 43 consenting participants, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during the task-switching RT trial was analyzed to assess differences in brain activity patterns as a function of daily physical activity. Daily duration of level 4 physical activity correlated negatively with and significantly predicted IIV. Moreover, fMRI analysis confirmed that the higher physical activity group (duration of level 4 activity ≥ 26.4 min/day) showed significantly reduced age-related functional attenuation of prefrontal activations during the task-switching RT trial. The study discusses the possibility that enhancing the moderate daily physical activity could be helpful for lowering the rate of neurocognitive degradations in healthy elderly individuals.

Citing Articles

Adiposity influences intraindividual variability in behavioral and neuroelectric indices of attentional inhibition.

Kim J, Walk A, Keye S, Kinder C, Cannavale C, Burd N Psychophysiology. 2024; 61(12):e14677.

PMID: 39215400 PMC: 11579232. DOI: 10.1111/psyp.14677.


The link between executive skills and neural dynamics during encoding, inhibition, and retrieval of visual information in the elderly.

Parviainen T, Alexandrou A, Lapinkero H, Sipila S, Kujala J Hum Brain Mapp. 2024; 45(12):e26755.

PMID: 39185717 PMC: 11345698. DOI: 10.1002/hbm.26755.


Neuroscience meets behavior: A systematic literature review on magnetic resonance imaging of the brain combined with real-world digital phenotyping.

Triana A, Saramaki J, Glerean E, Hayward N Hum Brain Mapp. 2024; 45(4):e26620.

PMID: 38436603 PMC: 10911114. DOI: 10.1002/hbm.26620.


Move Your Body, Boost Your Brain: The Positive Impact of Physical Activity on Cognition across All Age Groups.

Festa F, Medori S, Macri M Biomedicines. 2023; 11(6).

PMID: 37371860 PMC: 10296541. DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines11061765.


Influence of Strenuous Physical Activity and Cardiorespiratory Fitness on Age-Related Differences in Brain Activations During Varieties of Cognitive Control.

Skolasinska P, Basak C, Qin S Neuroscience. 2023; 520:58-83.

PMID: 37054946 PMC: 10234626. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2023.04.007.