Cross‐sectional associations between sedentary time with cognitive engagement and brain volume among community‐dwelling vulnerable older adults

Author:

Kurita Satoshi1ORCID,Tsutsumimoto Kota1ORCID,Kiuchi Yuto12ORCID,Nishimoto Kazuhei13,Harada Kenji1,Shimada Hiroyuki1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Preventive Gerontology Center for Gerontology and Social Science, Research Institute, National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology Obu Japan

2. Graduate School of Health Sciences, Kagoshima University Kagoshima Japan

3. Department of Medical Sciences, Medical Science Division, Graduate School of Medicine, Science and Technology Shinshu University Nagano Japan

Abstract

AimsVulnerable older adults tend to decrease physical activity (PA) and increase sedentary time (ST). Previous research on the associations between ST and brain volume have yielded inconsistent findings, without considering the impact of cognitive engagement (CE) on cognitive function. We aimed to examine the association between ST with CE and brain volume.MethodsA structural magnetic resonance imaging survey was conducted among community‐dwelling vulnerable older adults. Brain volumetric measurements were obtained using 3T magnetic resonance imaging and pre‐processed using FreeSurfer. ST with low or high CE was assessed using a 12‐item questionnaire. PA was assessed by the frequency of light and moderate levels of physical exercise according to the Japanese version of the Cardiovascular Health Study criteria. Participants were categorized into a low PA group and a moderate‐to‐high PA group.ResultsAmong 91 participants (83.1 ± 5.2 years old, 61.5% female), 26 were low PA. The overall sample and moderate‐to‐high PA group did not show significant positive associations with brain volume for ST with high CE. In the low PA group, isotemporal substitution models showed that replacing ST with low CE by ST with high CE was significantly associated with increased brain volume in some areas, including the rostral and caudal anterior cingulate (β = 0.486–0.618, all P < 0.05, adjusted R2 = 0.344–0.663).ConclusionsOur findings suggest that replacing ST with low CE by ST with high CE is positively associated with brain volume in vulnerable older adults with low PA. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2024; 24: 82–89.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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