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Effects of a 12-week exercise program on cognition in Parkinson’s disease

J.C. Johnson, A.L. Svitak, M.T. Farrell, S.C. Mosch, F. Yu, E.D. Parker, L.R. Hanson (Saint Paul, MN, USA)

Meeting: 2016 International Congress

Abstract Number: 1404

Keywords: Cognitive dysfunction, Motor control

Session Information

Date: Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Session Title: Parkinson's disease: Cognition

Session Time: 12:00pm-1:30pm

Location: Exhibit Hall located in Hall B, Level 2

Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of a 12-week vigorous exercise program to improve primarily cognition and secondarily motor function and quality of life in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) using a delayed start design.

Background: In PD, exercise has been shown to improve motor function including gait, stability, and joint excursion. There is growing evidence from research in other neurodegenerative disorders that exercise has a positive effect on cognition. A similar effect is emerging in PD, but to date studies have had a limited exercise dose and cognitive testing.

Methods: Twenty-two participants with PD were recruited and evaluated for primarily cognition, secondarily for motor function and quality of life three times during a 24-week period. Each group received a 12-week vigorous exercise program (3x/week for 50 min) either immediately or with a 12-week delay after the initial evaluation. Two analyses were done, the first compared the immediate start group with the delayed start group as the control using paired t-tests. The second analysis compared changes in outcomes immediately pre- and post-exercise in all participants.

Results: In general, there were no differences in outcomes at baseline between the immediate start and delayed start exercise groups. Trends in cognitive measures suggest cognition was slightly improved in the immediate start group compared to the delayed start group. In the comparison of pre- to post-exercise, vigorous exercise levels increased over the 12-week exercise period (p<0.05) and motor function was significantly improved (UPDRS III). A trend of improved cognitive and quality of life measures was also observed in this comparison, in particular with an improvement in working memory.

Table 1. Between-subjects comparisons of cognitive composite measures comparing the immediate start group (treatment) versus the delayed start group (control).
Measure Immediate start v delayed start as control p-value
Learning Composite -0.1662 0.8305
Retrieval Composite -0.3612 0.5668
Working Memory Composite 0.993 0.0393
Speed Composite -0.6559 0.155
Table 2. Within-subjects comparisons of cognitive composite measures pre-treatment versus post-treatment (immediate-start and delayed-start groups combined).
Measure Pre Post p=
Learning Composite 8.91 8.98 .87
Retrieval Composite 9.09 8.73 .4
Working Memory Composite 9.26 9.85 .05
Speed Composite 12.66 12.76 .64

Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that PD motor function was improved after a 12-week vigorous exercise program. Cognition and quality of life were improving in the expected direction. A larger sample size would be necessary to show a beneficial effect of exercise on cognition in PD.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

J.C. Johnson, A.L. Svitak, M.T. Farrell, S.C. Mosch, F. Yu, E.D. Parker, L.R. Hanson. Effects of a 12-week exercise program on cognition in Parkinson’s disease [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2016; 31 (suppl 2). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/effects-of-a-12-week-exercise-program-on-cognition-in-parkinsons-disease/. Accessed May 16, 2025.
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