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Effects of multidomain lifestyle interventions on cognitive decline and Alzheimer's disease prevention: A literature review and future recommendations

Medicine and Health

Effects of multidomain lifestyle interventions on cognitive decline and Alzheimer's disease prevention: A literature review and future recommendations

S. Noach, B. Witteman, et al.

Discover how multidomain lifestyle interventions might hold the key to preventing cognitive decline and Alzheimer's disease in this intriguing study conducted by Sasja Noach, Ben Witteman, H Myrthe Boss, and André Janse. Delve into the mixed results of nine studies and learn why more research is essential!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder with an increasing incidence and currently without a cure. It is speculated that targeting multiple modifiable risk factors (MRFs) could be a beneficial strategy for the prevention of cognitive decline and AD. This study provides an overview and discusses the existing literature on multidomain lifestyle interventions in relation to cognitive decline and the prevention of AD. A literature search was performed in PubMed and Scopus, for studies published in English up to 31 May 2021. We identified nine relevant studies on the effect of multidomain lifestyle interventions on cognition (n = 8) and/or AD incidence or risk scores (n = 4). The studies included a combination of the separate intervention components diet (n = 8), physical activity (n = 9), cognitive activity (n = 6), metabolic or cardiovascular risk factor reduction strategies (n = 8), social activity (n = 2), medication (n = 2), and/or supplementation (n = 1). Global cognition was improved significantly in four of the eight studies that had global cognition as the outcome. Moreover, significant improvements were shown for cognitive domains in two of the three studies with specific cognitive domains as an outcome. No effect on AD incidence was observed, although positive results were shown for AD risk scores. The results suggest that multidomain lifestyle intervention studies may be partially effective in preventing cognitive decline. However, studies were heterogeneous and limited in follow-up. Future research on the effect of multidomain lifestyle interventions on cognitive decline and AD incidence must be conducted with a longer follow-up period.
Publisher
Cerebral Circulation - Cognition and Behavior
Published On
May 13, 2023
Authors
Sasja Noach, Ben Witteman, H Myrthe Boss, André Janse
Tags
Alzheimer's disease
cognitive decline
lifestyle interventions
mixed results
global cognition
future research
follow-up periods
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