Structured exercise training can significantly improve brain function in stroke survivors, according to research presented Wednesday at the American Stroke Association’s International Stroke Conference 2017.
In a meta-analysis of 13 intervention trials that included 735 participants, researchers found that structured physical activity training significantly improved cognitive deficits among stroke survivors regardless of the length of the rehabilitation program.
The researchers also found that cognitive abilities can be enhanced even when physical activity is introduced in the chronic stroke phase, which is beyond three months after a stroke.
“Physical activity is extremely helpful for stroke survivors for a number of reasons, and our findings suggest that this may also be a good strategy to promote cognitive recovery after stroke” said Lauren E. Oberlin, a graduate student at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. “We found that a program as short as twelve weeks is effective at improving cognition and even patients with chronic stroke can experience improvement in their cognition with an exercise intervention.”
Studies estimate that up to 85 percent of people who suffer a stroke will have cognitive impairments, including deficits in executive function, attention and working memory. Because drugs don’t improve cognitive function, physical activity—such as physical therapy, aerobic and strength training—has become a low-cost intervention to treat cognitive deficits in stroke survivors.
The researchers analyzed general cognitive improvement, as well as improvement specific to areas of higher order cognition: executive function, attention and working memory. Exercise led to selective improvements on measures of attention and processing speed.
The researchers also examined if cognitive improvements depended on the type of physical activity. Previous studies on healthy aging and dementia populations have found that aerobic exercise alone improves cognition, but the effects are increased when combined with an activity such as strength training. In the new study, combined strength and aerobic training programs yielded the largest cognitive gains.
“Integrating aerobic training into rehabilitation is very important, and for patients with mobility limitations, exercise can be modified so they can still experience increases in their fitness levels,” Oberlin said. “This has substantial effects on quality of life and functional improvement, and I think it’s really important to integrate this into rehabilitative care and primary practice.”
Stroke is the No. 5 killer and a leading cause of long-term disability in the United States.
From American Heart Association News
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