Aerobic exercise and yoga improve neurocognitive function in women with early psychosis

Impairments of attention and memory are evident in early psychosis, and are associated with functional disability. In a group of stable, medicated women patients, we aimed to determine whether participating in aerobic exercise or yoga improved cognitive impairments and clinical symptoms. A total of...

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Veröffentlicht in:NPJ schizophrenia 2015-12, Vol.1 (1), p.15047-15047, Article 15047
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Jingxia, Chan, Sherry KW, Lee, Edwin HM, Chang, Wing Chung, Tse, Michael, Su, Wayne Weizhong, Sham, Pak, Hui, Christy LM, Joe, Glen, Chan, Cecilia LW, Khong, P L, So, Kwok Fai, Honer, William G, Chen, Eric YH
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Impairments of attention and memory are evident in early psychosis, and are associated with functional disability. In a group of stable, medicated women patients, we aimed to determine whether participating in aerobic exercise or yoga improved cognitive impairments and clinical symptoms. A total of 140 female patients were recruited, and 124 received the allocated intervention in a randomized controlled study of 12 weeks of yoga or aerobic exercise compared with a waitlist group. The primary outcomes were cognitive functions including memory and attention. Secondary outcome measures were the severity of psychotic and depressive symptoms, and hippocampal volume. Data from 124 patients were included in the final analysis based on the intention-to-treat principle. Both yoga and aerobic exercise groups demonstrated significant improvements in working memory ( P
ISSN:2334-265X
2334-265X
DOI:10.1038/npjschz.2015.47