Does sleep moderate the effects of exercise training or complex mental and social activities on cognitive function in adults with chronic stroke? Secondary analysis of a randomized trial

Ryan S Falck, Ryan G Stein, Jennifer C Davis, Janice J Eng, Laura E Middleton, Peter A Hall, Teresa Liu-Ambrose
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Abstract

Background Exercise (EX) or cognitive and social enrichment (ENRICH) are two strategies for promoting cognition post-stroke. Whether sleep moderates the effects of EX or ENRICH on cognition in adults with chronic stroke is unknown. Methods A three-arm parallel randomized clinical trial among community-dwelling adults aged 55+ years with chronic stroke (i.e., ≥12 months since stroke). Participants were randomized to 2x/week EX, ENRICH, or balance and tone control (BAT). At baseline, device-measured sleep duration and efficiency were measured using wrist-worn actigraphy; self-reported quality was measured by Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Participants were categorized at baseline as having good or poor device-measured duration, device-measured efficiency, or self-reported quality based on PSQI. The primary cognitive outcome was Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale Plus (ADAS-Cog-Plus) measured at baseline, 6 months (end of intervention), and 12 months (6-month follow-up). We examined if baseline sleep categorizations (i.e., good/poor) moderated effects of EX or ENRICH on ADAS-Cog-Plus. Results We enrolled 120 participants in the trial (EX=34; ENRICH=34; BAT=52). Sleep quality (i.e., device-measured sleep efficiency or self-reported sleep quality) categorization moderated effects of EX (but not ENRICH) on ADAS-Cog-Plus. Compared with BAT participants with poor sleep quality, EX participants with poor sleep quality had better ADAS-Cog-Plus performance at 6 months (estimated mean difference for those with poor device-measured sleep efficiency: -0.48; 95% CI:[-0.85, -0.10]; p=0.010); estimated mean difference for those with poor self-reported sleep quality: -0.38; 95% CI:[-0.70, -0.07]; p=0.014). There was no effect of EX on ADAS-Cog-Plus for participants with good sleep quality. Device-measured sleep duration did not moderate intervention effects. Conclusion Exercise is particularly beneficial in improving cognitive function in adults with chronic stroke and poor sleep quality.
睡眠是否会减缓运动训练或复杂心理和社交活动对慢性中风成人认知功能的影响?随机试验的二次分析
背景 运动(EX)或认知和社交强化(ENRICH)是促进中风后认知的两种策略。睡眠是否会调节 EX 或 ENRICH 对慢性中风成人认知能力的影响尚不清楚。方法 在社区居住的 55 岁以上慢性中风(即中风后≥12 个月)成人中开展三臂平行随机临床试验。参与者被随机分配到每周 2 次的 EX、ENRICH 或平衡和音调控制 (BAT)。在基线阶段,使用腕戴式行动记录仪测量设备测量的睡眠时间和睡眠效率;通过匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)测量自我报告的睡眠质量。根据 PSQI,基线参与者被分为设备测量的睡眠时间、设备测量的睡眠效率或自我报告的睡眠质量较好或较差。主要认知结果是阿尔茨海默病评估量表增强版(ADAS-Cog-Plus),分别在基线、6 个月(干预结束)和 12 个月(6 个月随访)进行测量。我们研究了基线睡眠分类(即好/差)是否会调节 EX 或 ENRICH 对 ADAS-Cog-Plus 的影响。结果 我们在试验中招募了 120 名参与者(EX=34;ENRICH=34;BAT=52)。睡眠质量(即设备测量的睡眠效率或自我报告的睡眠质量)分类调节了EX(而非ENRICH)对ADAS-Cog-Plus的影响。与睡眠质量差的BAT参与者相比,睡眠质量差的EX参与者在6个月时的ADAS-Cog-Plus表现更好(设备测量睡眠效率差者的估计平均差异:-0.48;95% CI:[-0.85,-0.10];p=0.010);自我报告睡眠质量差者的估计平均差异:-0.38;95% CI:[-0.70,-0.07];p=0.014)。对于睡眠质量好的参与者,EX 对 ADAS-Cog-Plus 没有影响。设备测量的睡眠时间并不影响干预效果。结论 运动对改善慢性中风和睡眠质量差的成人的认知功能特别有益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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