Acute exercise alters brain glucose metabolism in aging and Alzheimer's disease

There is evidence that aerobic exercise improves brain health. Benefits may be modulated by acute physiological responses to exercise, but this has not been well characterized in older or cognitively impaired adults. The randomized controlled trial 'AEROBIC' (NCT04299308) enrolled 60 older...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of physiology 2024-09
Hauptverfasser: Green, Zachary D, John, Casey S, Kueck, Paul J, Blankenship, Anneka E, Kemna, Riley E, Johnson, Chelsea N, Yoksh, Lauren E, Best, Shaun R, Donald, Joseph S, Mahnken, Jonathan D, Burns, Jeffrey M, Vidoni, Eric D, Morris, Jill K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There is evidence that aerobic exercise improves brain health. Benefits may be modulated by acute physiological responses to exercise, but this has not been well characterized in older or cognitively impaired adults. The randomized controlled trial 'AEROBIC' (NCT04299308) enrolled 60 older adults who were cognitively healthy (n = 30) or cognitively impaired (n = 30) to characterize the acute brain responses to moderate [45-55% heart rate reserve (HRR)] and higher (65-75% HRR) intensity acute exercise. Each participant received two fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) scans, one at rest and one following acute exercise. Change in cerebral glucose metabolism from rest to exercise was the primary outcome. Blood biomarker responses were also characterized as secondary outcomes. Whole grey matter FDG-PET standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) differed between exercise (1.045 ± 0.082) and rest (0.985 ± 0.077) across subjects [Diff = -0.060, t(58) = 13.8, P 
ISSN:0022-3751
1469-7793
1469-7793
DOI:10.1113/JP286923