Examining the role of physical activity in older adults with epilepsy

IF 1.5 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Stephen P. Klaus , Serdar Akkol , Smitha K. Achuthan , Annie He , Cynthia Zheng , Ed Faught , Halley B. Alexander
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Epilepsy disproportionately affects older adults due to acquired conditions including stroke, neurodegeneration and head trauma secondary to falls. Current literature lacks adequate representation of specific therapies and considerations for this cohort. Furthermore, older adults are more susceptible to the adverse effects of anti-seizure medications necessitating increased caution when treating. Non-pharmacological interventions, including physical activity (PA), are underrecognized, particularly in older adults where they may be of greatest benefit. The following narrative review describes how older adults are uniquely impacted by epilepsy and associated comorbidities. It examines the current literature with respect to PA in epilepsy and, where available, evidence for PA in older adults. This includes how PA can affect pathogenesis and reduce the incidence of epilepsy onset through the reduction of neuroinflammation. PA may also be utilized by older adults with epilepsy to improve cardiovascular function, seizure control, prevent falls and secondary head injury, as an adjunct treatment for mood disorders and cognitive decline, and to promote general well-being. PA has a large and underappreciated role to play in older adults with epilepsy and is increasingly being recognized by healthcare providers and incorporated into practice guidelines.
检查身体活动在老年癫痫患者中的作用
由于获得性疾病,包括中风、神经变性和跌倒后继发的头部创伤,癫痫对老年人的影响尤为严重。目前的文献缺乏对该队列的特定治疗和考虑的充分代表。此外,老年人更容易受到抗癫痫药物的不良影响,因此在治疗时要更加谨慎。包括身体活动在内的非药物干预措施尚未得到充分认识,特别是在老年人中,这可能是最大的益处。以下叙述性回顾描述了老年人如何受到癫痫和相关合并症的独特影响。它检查了目前关于癫痫中PA的文献,以及老年人中PA的证据。这包括PA如何通过减少神经炎症影响发病机制和减少癫痫发作的发生率。老年癫痫患者也可使用PA来改善心血管功能,控制癫痫发作,预防跌倒和继发性头部损伤,作为情绪障碍和认知能力下降的辅助治疗,并促进总体健康。PA在老年癫痫患者中发挥着巨大而未被充分认识的作用,并且越来越多地被卫生保健提供者认识到并纳入实践指南。
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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来源期刊
Epilepsy and Behavior Reports
Epilepsy and Behavior Reports Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
13.30%
发文量
54
审稿时长
50 days
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