Aerobic exercise and cognitive function in chronic severe traumatic brain injury survivors: a within-subject A-B-A intervention study.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION BMC Sports Science Medicine and Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2024-09-27 DOI:10.1186/s13102-024-00993-4
Lidia Pérez López, Margalida Coll-Andreu, Meritxell Torras-Garcia, Manel Font-Farré, Guillermo R Oviedo, Lluis Capdevila, Myriam Guerra-Balic, Isabel Portell-Cortés, David Costa-Miserachs, Timothy P Morris
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Abstract

Background: Following acute and sub-acute rehabilitation from severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), minimal to no efficacious interventions to treat ongoing cognitive deficits are available. Aerobic exercise is a non-invasive behavioral intervention with promise to treat cognitive deficits in TBI populations.

Methods: Six individuals, aged 24-62 years, with chronic (> 8 months since injury) severe (Glasgow Coma Scale of 3-8) TBI were recruited from two outpatient rehabilitation centers. In an A-B-A study design, 20-weeks of supervised aerobic exercise interventions were delivered three times per week (phase B) in addition to participants typical rehabilitation schedules (phases A). The effect of phase B was tested on a trail making test part B (primary outcome measure of executive function) as well as objective daily physical activity (PA), using both group level (linear mixed effect models) and single subject statistics.

Results: Five of six participants increased trail-making test part B by more than 10% pre-to-post phase B, with three of six making a clinically meaningful improvement (+ 1SD in normative scores). A significant main effect of time was seen with significant improvement in trail-making test part B pre-to-post exercise (phase B). No significant effects in other planned comparisons were found. Statistically significant increases in daily moderate-to-vigorous PA were also seen during phase B compared to phase A with three of six individuals making a significant behaviour change.

Conclusions: The addition of supervised aerobic exercise to typical rehabilitation strategies in chronic survivors of severe TBI can improve executive set shifting abilities and increase voluntary daily PA levels.

Trial registration: Retrospective trial registration on July 11 2024 with trial number: ISRCTN17487462.

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有氧运动与慢性严重脑外伤幸存者的认知功能:一项主体内 A-B-A 干预研究。
背景:严重创伤性脑损伤(TBI)急性期和亚急性期康复后,治疗持续性认知障碍的有效干预措施少之又少。有氧运动是一种非侵入性的行为干预措施,有望治疗创伤性脑损伤人群的认知障碍:从两家门诊康复中心招募了六名年龄在 24-62 岁之间的慢性(受伤后超过 8 个月)重度(格拉斯哥昏迷量表 3-8 级)创伤性脑损伤患者。在一项A-B-A研究设计中,除了参与者典型的康复计划(A阶段)外,还进行了为期20周、每周三次的有氧运动指导干预(B阶段)。研究人员使用组水平(线性混合效应模型)和单个受试者统计方法,测试了 B 阶段对线索制作测试 B 部分(衡量执行功能的主要结果)以及客观日常体力活动(PA)的影响:结果:六名参与者中有五名在 B 阶段前后的线索制作测试 B 部分的成绩提高了 10%以上,六名参与者中有三人的成绩有临床意义的提高(常模分数+1SD)。时间的主效应非常明显,在运动前和运动后(B 阶段),追踪测试 B 部分都有明显改善。在其他计划比较中未发现明显效果。与 A 阶段相比,B 阶段的每日中强度活动量也出现了统计学意义上的显著增长,6 人中有 3 人的行为发生了显著变化:结论:在慢性严重创伤性脑损伤幸存者的典型康复策略中加入监督有氧运动,可以提高执行集转移能力,增加自愿的日常PA水平:回顾性试验注册日期:2024年7月11日,试验编号:ISRCTN17487462。
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来源期刊
BMC Sports Science Medicine and Rehabilitation
BMC Sports Science Medicine and Rehabilitation Medicine-Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.30%
发文量
196
审稿时长
26 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation is an open access, peer reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of sports medicine and the exercise sciences, including rehabilitation, traumatology, cardiology, physiology, and nutrition.
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