Conference Coverage

Aerobic exercise boosts brain power in mild cognitive impairment


 

AT AAIC2013

BOSTON – Combined results from two 6-month, randomized trials indicate that aerobic exercise improves executive function to a significantly greater degree than do stretching and tone exercises in patients with mild cognitive impairment or mild insulin resistance, Laura Baker, Ph.D., reported at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference 2013.

The benefits were greatest in carriers of the apo E epsilon 4 allele, which confers a higher risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease.

Michele G. Sullivan/IMNG Medical Media

Dr. Laura Baker

But the "how" behind this brain boost remains something of a mystery, said Dr. Baker of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C. "In apo E epsilon 4–negative participants, we think the mechanism is probably improved insulin sensitivity. But in the apo E epsilon 4–positive patients, it seems to be some other mechanism that we don’t understand."

Exercise modulates the risk of cognitive decline in a number of ways, she said. "It has a diversified portfolio of targets. Exercise exerts benefits on inflammation, improves the integrity of both macro- and microvessels, has a beneficial effect on physical and psychological stress, and modulates inflammation – all of which have been shown to have potent effects on amyloid burden."

These findings over the years have "set the stage nicely for clinical trials. But what’s the right exposure? Who are the best responders? And what is the clinical significance of the changes? Do they really translate into any improvement in quality of life?"

To try and answer some of these questions, she and her colleagues conducted two randomized physical activity trials. They recruited a total of 67 participants: 33 in a study of exercise in adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and 34 with impaired insulin sensitivity who were in an identical study.

The two studies took a look at different aspects of the relationship between cognitive and metabolic health, Dr. Baker said at the meeting. "Mild metabolic disease leads to vascular dysfunction and poor glucose tolerance, which puts a person at an increased risk of mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s dementia."

Both studies were 6 months long and randomized participants to 45-minute sessions of either a stretching/toning program or aerobic exercise, conducted four times a week. Both were held at local YMCAs and supervised by trained staff.

For the duration of the stretching program, the target heart rate was less than 35% of the maximum; the exercises also included balance and gentle yoga. The aerobic program aimed for a heart rate of 70%-80% of maximum. It consisted of ever-increasing workouts on treadmill, stationary bike, or elliptical trainer. Adherence was very good, Dr. Baker said, with 93% of the subjects in each study completing the protocol.

Each trial had the same endpoints: tests of executive function (a composite of trail-making, word fluency, symbol-digit, and visual working memory) and short-term memory (story recall, list learning, and delayed matching).

The participants were a mean of 68.5 years old; altogether, 46 were randomized to the aerobic program and 21 to the stretching program. They were out of shape, Dr. Baker said, with a mean VO2 peak of 22 mL/kg per minute – considered below average for that age. They were not an obese group overall, but they had a high body fat percentage of around 38%.

In the MCI study, the mean Mini-Mental State Exam score was 27. In the metabolic dysfunction study, the mean fasting glucose was 100 pg/dL and the mean fasting insulin, 11.47 mU/mL.

At the studies’ ends, aerobic exercise groups had made significant gains in their cardiorespiratory fitness, as measured by improvements in the VO2 peak, the treadmill incline, and the duration they could exercise. These measures were unchanged from baseline in the stretching group. The VO2 peak changes were not significantly associated with executive function.

The exercise groups in both studies also experienced significant gains on the composite measure of executive function, Dr. Baker said. They had an increase of about 2 points from baseline, compared with a decline of about 3 points from baseline in the stretching group. The gains were similar whether the subjects had MCI or insulin resistance.

All of the subjects in both studies also underwent oral glucose tolerance testing at baseline and at their last visit to determine any changes in insulin resistance. Measures of fasting glucose, fasting insulin, insulin resistance, and glucose disposal during metabolic clamp improved significantly in the exercise groups, with no difference by patient group or by apo E epsilon 4 status.

A subanalysis that controlled for insulin sensitivity examined exercise’s contribution to the changes in executive function among the 52 individuals who were apo E epsilon 4 negative and the 15 who were apo E epsilon 4 positive. "With the change in insulin sensitivity out of the picture, the exercise-related cognitive benefit was greater for apo E epsilon 4–positive adults," she said.

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