进行性多发性硬化症患者的心肺健康和自由生活体力活动与认知无关:来自CogEx研究的基线分析

IF 5
Brian M Sandroff, Robert W Motl, Maria Pia Amato, Giampaolo Brichetto, Jeremy Chataway, Nancy D Chiaravalloti, Gary R Cutter, Ulrik Dalgas, John DeLuca, Rachel Farrell, Peter Feys, Massimo Filippi, Jennifer Freeman, Matilde Inglese, Cecilia Meza, Maria A Rocca, Amber Salter, Anthony Feinstein
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引用次数: 9

摘要

背景:有氧运动训练(改善心肺健康的身体活动)是治疗多发性硬化症(MS)认知障碍的一种很有前途的方法。然而,有有限的证据表明,身体活动和健康水平与进展性多发性硬化症的认知相关。目的:我们在一个大型的国际进展性多发性硬化症样本中研究了心肺健康、中高强度身体活动(MVPA)和认知表现之间的关系。方法:240例欧洲和北美进展性多发性硬化症患者在平躺式踏步器上进行心肺健康测量,佩戴ActiGraph GT3X +加速度计7天测量MVPA,并进行MS简短国际认知评估。结果:心肺健康与符号数字模态测试(SDMT)无显著相关;r = -0.01;r = -0.04),加州语言学习测试ii (CVLT-II);r = 0.05;r = 0.05),或修订的简短视觉空间记忆测试(BVMT-R;r = -0.14;R = -0.14) z分数控制年龄,性别和教育。MVPA与SDMT (r = 0.05)、CVLT-II (r = -0.07)、BVMT-R (r = 0.01) z-score无显著相关。结论:在这个大型进展性MS样本中,心肺健康和MVPA与认知无关,但这些结果代表了记录CogEx试验成功的关键操作检查。这突出了研究其他运动相关的作用机制对改善进展性多发性硬化症认知的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cardiorespiratory fitness and free-living physical activity are not associated with cognition in persons with progressive multiple sclerosis: Baseline analyses from the CogEx study.

Background: Aerobic exercise training (physical activity for improving cardiorespiratory fitness) represents a promising approach for managing cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosis (MS). However, there is limited evidence that levels of physical activity and fitness are associated with cognition in progressive MS.

Objective: We examined associations among cardiorespiratory fitness, moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), and cognitive performance in a large, international progressive MS sample.

Methods: Two hundred forty European and North American persons with progressive MS underwent cardiorespiratory fitness measurement on a recumbent stepper, wore an ActiGraph GT3X + accelerometer for 7 days for measuring MVPA, and underwent the Brief International Cognitive Assessment in MS.

Results: Cardiorespiratory fitness was not significantly correlated with Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT; r = -0.01; r = -0.04), California Verbal Learning Test-II (CVLT-II; r = 0.05; r = 0.05), or Brief Visuospatial Memory Test-Revised (BVMT-R; r = -0.14; r = -0.14) z-scores controlling for age, sex, and education. MVPA and SDMT (r = 0.05), CVLT-II (r = -0.07), and BVMT-R (r = 0.01) z-scores were not significantly correlated.

Conclusion: Cardiorespiratory fitness and MVPA were not associated with cognition in this large progressive MS sample, yet these outcomes represent critical manipulation checks for documenting the success of the CogEx trial. This highlights the importance of examining other exercise-related mechanisms-of-action for improving cognition in progressive MS.

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