The influence of baseline sleep on exercise‐induced cognitive change in cognitively unimpaired older adults: A randomised clinical trial

Author:

Sewell Kelsey R.1ORCID,Rainey‐Smith Stephanie R.1234,Peiffer Jeremiah1,Sohrabi Hamid R.1235,Doecke James6,Frost Natalie J.134,Markovic Shaun J.13,Erickson Kirk78,Brown Belinda M.123

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Healthy Ageing Health Futures Institute Murdoch University Murdoch Western Australia Australia

2. School of Medical and Health Sciences Edith Cowan University Joondalup Western Australia Australia

3. Australian Alzheimer's Research Foundation Sarich Neuroscience Research Institute Nedlands Western Australia Australia

4. School of Psychological Science University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia Australia

5. Department of Biomedical Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

6. Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital CSIRO Health and Biosecurity/Australian E‐Health Research Centre Brisbane Queensland Australia

7. Department of Psychiatry University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

8. AdventHealth Research Institute Orlando Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesObservational studies consistently demonstrate that physical activity is associated with elevated cognitive function, however, there remains significant heterogeneity in cognitive outcomes from randomized exercise interventions. Individual variation in sleep behaviours may be a source of variability in the effectiveness of exercise‐induced cognitive change, however this has not yet been investigated. The current study aimed to (1) investigate the influence of a 6‐month exercise intervention on sleep, assessed pre‐ and post‐intervention and, (2) investigate whether baseline sleep measures moderate exercise‐induced cognitive changes.MethodsWe utilised data from the Intense Physical Activity and Cognition (IPAC) study (n = 89), a 6‐month moderate intensity and high intensity exercise intervention, in cognitively unimpaired community‐dwelling older adults aged 60–80 (68.76 ± 5.32). Exercise was supervised and completed on a stationary exercise bicycle, and cognitive function was measured using a comprehensive neuropsychological battery administered pre‐ and post‐intervention. Sleep was measured using the Pittsburgh sleep quality index. There was no effect of the exercise intervention on any sleep outcomes from pre‐ to post‐intervention.ResultsThere was a significant moderating effect of baseline sleep efficiency on both episodic memory and global cognition within the moderate intensity exercise group, such that those with poorer sleep efficiency at baseline showed greater exercise‐induced improvements in episodic memory.ConclusionsThese results suggest that those with poorer sleep may have the greatest exercise‐induced cognitive benefits and that baseline sleep behaviours may be an important source of heterogeneity in previous exercise interventions targeting cognitive outcomes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology

Reference52 articles.

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2. Physical activity, exercise, and physical fitness: definitions and distinctions for health‐related research;Caspersen CJ;Public Health Rep,1985

3. Effect of a 24-Month Physical Activity Intervention vs Health Education on Cognitive Outcomes in Sedentary Older Adults

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