Midlife aerobic exercise and brain structural integrity: Associations with age and cardiorespiratory fitness

Lower midlife physical activity is associated with higher risk of neurodegenerative disease in late life. However, it remains unknown whether physical exercise and fitness are associated with brain structural integrity during midlife. The purpose of this study was to compare brain structures between...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Fla.), 2021-01, Vol.225, p.117512-117512, Article 117512
Hauptverfasser: Tarumi, Takashi, Tomoto, Tsubasa, Repshas, Justin, Wang, Ciwen, Hynan, Linda S., Cullum, C. Munro, Zhu, David C., Zhang, Rong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Lower midlife physical activity is associated with higher risk of neurodegenerative disease in late life. However, it remains unknown whether physical exercise and fitness are associated with brain structural integrity during midlife. The purpose of this study was to compare brain structures between middle-aged aerobically trained adults (MA), middle-aged sedentary (MS), and young sedentary (YS) adults. Thirty MA (54±4 years), 30 MS (54±4 years), and 30 YS (32±6 years) participants (50% women) underwent measurements of brain volume, cortical thickness, and white matter (WM) fiber integrity using MRI. MA participants had aerobic training for 24.8±9.6 years and the highest cardiorespiratory fitness level (i.e., peak oxygen uptake: VO2peak) among all groups. Global WM integrity, as assessed with fractional anisotropy (FA) from diffusion tensor imaging, was lower in the MS compared with the YS group. However, global FA in the MA group was significantly higher than that in the MS group (P
ISSN:1053-8119
1095-9572
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117512