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The impact of aerobic and resistance training intensity on markers of neuroplasticity in health and disease

Authors :
Tibor Hortobágyi
Tomas Vetrovsky
Guilherme Moraes Balbim
Nárlon Cássio Boa Sorte Silva
Andrea Manca
Franca Deriu
Mia Kolmos
Christina Kruuse
Teresa Liu-Ambrose
Zsolt Radák
Márk Váczi
Hanna Johansson
Paulo Cezar Rocha dos Santos
Erika Franzén
Urs Granacher
Source :
Ageing research reviews. 80
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective: To determine the effects of low- vs. high-intensity aerobic and resistance training on motor and cognitive function, brain activation, brain structure, and neurochemical markers of neuroplasticity and the association thereof in healthy young and older adults and in patients with multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and stroke. Design: Systematic review and robust variance estimation meta-analysis with meta-regression. Data sources: Systematic search of MEDLINE, Web of Science, and CINAHL databases. Results: Fifty studies with 60 intervention arms and 2283 in-analyses participants were included. Due to the low number of studies, the three patient groups were combined and analyzed as a single group. Overall, low- (g=0.19, p = 0.024) and high-intensity exercise (g=0.40, p = 0.001) improved neuroplasticity. Exercise intensity scaled with neuroplasticity only in healthy young adults but not in healthy older adults or patient groups. Exercise-induced improvements in neuroplasticity were associated with changes in motor but not cognitive outcomes. Conclusion: Exercise intensity is an important variable to dose and individualize the exercise stimulus for healthy young individuals but not necessarily for healthy older adults and neurological patients. This conclusion warrants caution because studies are needed that directly compare the effects of low- vs. high-intensity exercise on neuroplasticity to determine if such changes are mechanistically and incrementally linked to improved cognition and motor function.

Details

ISSN :
18729649
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ageing research reviews
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0ba913eacde6142f8a66027b970066f5