Associations of Cognitively Active Versus Passive Sedentary Behaviors and Cognition in Older Adults.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of physical activity & health Pub Date : 2024-07-31 Print Date: 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1123/jpah.2024-0003
Mariana Wingood, Nancy M Gell, Dori E Rosenberg, Gregory J Stoddard, Erin D Bouldin
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Abstract

Background: Cognitively stimulating sedentary behavior (SB) may positively impact cognition. This study aimed to (1) describe participation across types of SB among older adults with and without cognitive impairment and (2) examine how baseline SB participation impacts cognition, longitudinally.

Methods: We used National Health and Aging Trends Study data from rounds 6 to 11 for cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses. Participants were 2244 community-dwelling older adults who were selected for the SB module in round 6. The SBs were categorized as active (eg, hobbies) and passive (eg, television). Participants were also categorized as having intact or impaired orientation, memory, and executive function based on tests of orientation, recall, and the clock-drawing test. We calculated descriptive statistics characterizing SB by cognitive status. Aim 2 involved competing risks proportional hazard models of participants with intact cognition (n = 1574) to identify associations between baseline SB and changes in cognition, moves to institutional care, and death over 6 years.

Results: Participants (40% ≥ 80 years, 55% female, 77% White non-Hispanic) averaged 8.75 (SD = 4.42) hours of daily SB, including 4.05 (SD = 2.32) hours of passive SB and 4.75 (SD = 3.13) hours of active SB. Active SB >3 hours per day was associated with a lower risk of impaired orientation (subdistribution hazard models = 0.60; P = .048) and memory (subdistribution hazard models = 0.62; P = .02). Baseline participation in passive SB did not impact the risk of having a change in cognition during rounds 7 to 11.

Conclusion: Cognitive decline was lower among older adults who participated in more active SB. Thus, type of SB should be considered in examining the impact on cognition.

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认知活跃与被动久坐行为与老年人认知的关系。
背景:刺激认知的久坐行为(SB)可能会对认知产生积极影响。本研究旨在:(1)描述有认知障碍和无认知障碍的老年人参与各种类型的久坐不动行为的情况;(2)纵向研究基线久坐不动行为的参与如何影响认知能力:我们使用全国健康与老龄化趋势研究第 6 至第 11 轮的数据进行横截面和纵向分析。参与者为 2244 名居住在社区的老年人,他们在第 6 轮中被选入 SB 模块。SB分为主动型(如爱好)和被动型(如看电视)。根据方位测试、回忆测试和画钟测试,参与者还被分为方位、记忆和执行功能完好或受损。我们根据认知状况计算了 SB 的描述性统计数据。目标 2 包括对认知功能完好的参与者(n = 1574)建立竞争风险比例危险模型,以确定基线 SB 与 6 年内认知功能变化、转入机构护理和死亡之间的关联:参与者(40% ≥ 80 岁,55% 为女性,77% 为非西班牙裔白人)平均每天进行 8.75 小时(标准差 = 4.42)的体育锻炼,包括 4.05 小时(标准差 = 2.32)的被动体育锻炼和 4.75 小时(标准差 = 3.13)的主动体育锻炼。每天大于 3 小时的主动 SB 与定向力受损(子分布危险模型 = 0.60;P = 0.048)和记忆力受损(子分布危险模型 = 0.62;P = 0.02)的较低风险相关。基线参与被动式SB不会影响第7至11轮期间认知能力发生变化的风险:结论:参加更积极的体育锻炼的老年人认知能力下降的程度更低。因此,在研究对认知能力的影响时,应考虑SB的类型。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of physical activity & health
Journal of physical activity & health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
3.20%
发文量
100
期刊介绍: The Journal of Physical Activity and Health (JPAH) publishes original research and review papers examining the relationship between physical activity and health, studying physical activity as an exposure as well as an outcome. As an exposure, the journal publishes articles examining how physical activity influences all aspects of health. As an outcome, the journal invites papers that examine the behavioral, community, and environmental interventions that may affect physical activity on an individual and/or population basis. The JPAH is an interdisciplinary journal published for researchers in fields of chronic disease.
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