Physical activity predicts gray matter volume in late adulthood
The Cardiovascular Health Study
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Abstract
Objectives: Physical activity (PA) has been hypothesized to spare gray matter volume in late adulthood, but longitudinal data testing an association has been lacking. Here we tested whether PA would be associated with greater gray matter volume after a 9-year follow-up, a threshold could be identified for the amount of walking necessary to spare gray matter volume, and greater gray matter volume associated with PA would be associated with a reduced risk for cognitive impairment 13 years after the PA evaluation.
Methods: In 299 adults (mean age 78 years) from the Cardiovascular Health Cognition Study, we examined the association between gray matter volume, PA, and cognitive impairment. Physical activity was quantified as the number of blocks walked over 1 week. High-resolution brain scans were acquired 9 years after the PA assessment on cognitively normal adults. White matter hyperintensities, ventricular grade, and other health variables at baseline were used as covariates. Clinical adjudication for cognitive impairment occurred 13 years after baseline.
Results: Walking amounts ranged from 0 to 300 blocks (mean 56.3; SD 69.7). Greater PA predicted greater volumes of frontal, occipital, entorhinal, and hippocampal regions 9 years later. Walking 72 blocks was necessary to detect increased gray matter volume but walking more than 72 blocks did not spare additional volume. Greater gray matter volume with PA reduced the risk for cognitive impairment 2-fold.
Conclusion: Greater amounts of walking are associated with greater gray matter volume, which is in turn associated with a reduced risk of cognitive impairment.
Footnotes
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Study funding: Supported by the National Institute on Aging AG-023629. C.H.S. was supported by contract numbers N01-HC-85079 through N01-HC-85086, N01-HC-35129, N01 HC-15103, N01 HC-55222, N01-HC-75150, N01-HC-45133, and grant number U01 HL080295 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, with additional contribution from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Additional support was provided through R01 AG-15928, R01 AG-20098, and AG-027058 from the National Institute on Aging, R01 HL-075366 from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, and the University of Pittsburgh Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center P30-AG-024827 and an American Heart Association predoctoral grant to C.A.R. (0815465D).
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- 3MSE
- modified Mini-Mental State Examination
- CHS-CS
- Cardiovascular Health Study Cognition Study
- DSST
- Digit Symbol Substitution Test
- GM
- gray matter
- MCI
- mild cognitive impairment
- OR
- odds ratio
- PA
- physical activity
- SPM
- Statistical Parametric Mapping
- TIV
- total intracranial volume
- VBM
- voxel-based morphometry
- WM
- white matter
Supplemental data at www.neurology.org
- Received March 15, 2010.
- Accepted July 22, 2010.
- Copyright © 2010 by AAN Enterprises, Inc.
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