Is it all in the baseline? Trajectories of chair stand performance over 4 years and their association with grey matter structure in older adults

Understanding individual variability in response to physical activity is key to developing more effective and personalised interventions for healthy ageing. Here, we aimed to unpack individual differences by using longitudinal data from a randomised‐controlled trial of a 12‐month muscle strengthenin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human brain mapping 2023-08, Vol.44 (11), p.4299-4309
Hauptverfasser: Demnitz, Naiara, Gates, Anne T., Mortensen, Erik L., Garde, Ellen, Wimmelmann, Cathrine L., Siebner, Hartwig R., Kjaer, Michael, Boraxbekk, Carl‐Johan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding individual variability in response to physical activity is key to developing more effective and personalised interventions for healthy ageing. Here, we aimed to unpack individual differences by using longitudinal data from a randomised‐controlled trial of a 12‐month muscle strengthening intervention in older adults. Physical function of the lower extremities was collected from 247 participants (66.3 ± 2.5 years) at four time‐points. At baseline and at year 4, participants underwent 3 T MRI brain scans. K‐means longitudinal clustering was used to identify patterns of change in chair stand performance over 4 years, and voxel‐based morphometry was applied to map structural grey matter volume at baseline and year 4. Results identified three groups showing trajectories of poor (33.6%), mid (40.1%), and high (26.3%) performance. Baseline physical function, sex, and depressive symptoms significantly differed between trajectory groups. High performers showed greater grey matter volume in the motor cerebellum compared to the poor performers. After accounting for baseline chair stand performance, participants were re‐assigned to one of four trajectory‐based groups: moderate improvers (38.9%), maintainers (38.5%), improvers (13%), and decliners (9.7%). Clusters of significant grey matter differences were observed between improvers and decliners in the right supplementary motor area. Trajectory‐based group assignments were unrelated to the intervention arms of the study. In conclusion, patterns of change in chair stand performance were associated with greater grey matter volumes in cerebellar and cortical motor regions. Our findings emphasise that how you start matters, as baseline chair stand performance was associated with cerebellar volume 4 years later. The LIve active Successful Ageing study conducted a 12‐month muscle strengthening randomised‐controlled trial in older adults. Three years after the end of the intervention, intervention group assignment did not predict grey matter volume (GMV). In contrast, groups derived based on trajectories of physical function over 4 years were associated with GMV in cerebellar and cortical motor regions.
ISSN:1065-9471
1097-0193
1097-0193
DOI:10.1002/hbm.26346