SU20. Aerobic Exercise Intervention for Clinical High-Risk Youth Improves Cognitive and Hippocampal Abnormalitiesстатья из журнала
Аннотация: Background: Because exercise has been found to stimulate human medial temporal neurogenesis, and related abnormalities have been widely observed in studies of schizophrenia, cardiovascular activity may be an important intervention mechanism for psychosis. Despite the promise of exercise interventions, there have been no experimental studies of aerobic exercise in ultra-high risk youth (UHR). Methods: Participants were evaluated with a pretrial and post-trial assessment including clinical, cognitive, structural/functional imaging, and fitness assessments. Participants were enrolled in 12 weeks of supervised aerobic exercise (3 times each week, 65%–85% of VO2max). Results: A total of 11 participants enrolled in the study and 9 completed the trial (attending 100% of sessions). The participants exhibited level hippocampal volumes (no-change posttrial) as well as posttrial improvement in working (t(8) = −2.75, P ≤ .05), visual (t(8) = −2.27, P ≤ .05), and verbal (t(8) = −1.88, P ≤ .05) memory, while unrelated domains appeared unaffected across the trial. Notably, increases in visual learning were linked to significant increases in hippocampal-occipital connectivity, and participants showed trend-level improvements in positive (t(8) = −1.83, P = .06) and negative (t(8) = 1.40, P = .10) symptoms and a significant increase in social function posttrial (t(7), = −3.74, P ≤ .01). There were nonsignificant increases in VO2 max as well as a trend-level increase in extracurricular exercise activities posttrial (t(8) = −1.11, P = .15). Conclusion: Taken together, results suggest that aerobic exercise is a feasible and effective intervention that specifically targets medial temporal function. This presentation will also discuss the ongoing second phase of the study, including a randomized controlled trial (including a wait-listed UHR group) as well as the long-term follow-up of individuals who participated in the open-label phase.
Год издания: 2017
Авторы: Vijay A. Mittal, Derek J. Dean, Tina Gupta, Angela D. Bryan
Издательство: Oxford University Press
Источник: Schizophrenia Bulletin
Ключевые слова: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Children's Physical and Motor Development
Другие ссылки: Schizophrenia Bulletin (HTML)
PubMed Central (HTML)
PubMed Central (HTML)
Открытый доступ: bronze
Том: 43
Выпуск: suppl_1
Страницы: S168–S168