Previous research in a
laboratory setting has shown that people’s cognitive performance improves in
the hours after exercise, but how long this benefit lasts is unknown.
The new study, published in the International
Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, found that, on average, people aged 50 to 83 who did
more moderate to vigorous physical activity than usual on a given day did
better in memory tests the day after.
Less time spent sitting and six hours or
more of sleep were also linked to better scores in memory tests the next day.
More deep (slow-wave*) sleep also
contributed to memory function, and the research team found this accounted for
a small portion of the link between exercise and better next-day memory.
The research team looked at data from 76
men and women who wore activity trackers for eight days and took cognitive
tests each day.
Lead author Dr Mikaela Bloomberg (UCL
Institute of Epidemiology & Health Care) said: “Our findings suggest that
the short-term memory benefits of physical activity may last longer than
previously thought, possibly to the next day instead of just the few hours
after exercise. Getting more sleep, particularly deep sleep, seems to add to
this memory improvement.
“Moderate or vigorous activity means
anything that gets your heart rate up – this could be brisk walking, dancing or
walking up a few flights of stairs. It doesn’t have to be structured exercise.
“This was a small study and so it needs
to be replicated with a larger sample of participants before we can be certain
about the results.”
In the short term, exercise increases
blood flow to the brain and stimulates the release of neurotransmitters such as
norepinephrine and dopamine which help a range of cognitive functions.
These neurochemical changes are
understood to last up to a few hours after exercise. However, the researchers
noted that other brain states linked to exercise were more long-lasting. For
instance, evidence suggests exercise can enhance mood for up to 24 hours.
A previous study, published by a
separate research team in 2016, also found more synchronised activity in the
hippocampus (a marker of increased hippocampal function, which facilitates
memory function) for 48 hours after high-intensity interval training (HIIT)
cycling.
Co-author Professor Andrew Steptoe (UCL
Institute of Epidemiology & Health Care) said: “Among older adults,
maintaining cognitive function is important for good quality of life,
wellbeing, and independence. It’s therefore helpful to identify factors that
can affect cognitive health on a day-to-day basis.
“This study provides evidence that the
immediate cognitive benefits of exercise may last longer than we thought. It
also suggests good sleep quality separately contributes to cognitive
performance.
“However, we can’t establish from this
study whether these short-term boosts to cognitive performance contribute to
longer term cognitive health and though there is plenty of evidence to suggest
physical activity might slow cognitive decline and reduce dementia risk, it’s
still a matter of some debate.”
For the new study, the researchers
looked at data from wrist-worn activity trackers to determine how much time
participants spent being sedentary, doing light physical activity, and doing
moderate or vigorous physical activity. They also quantified sleep duration and
time spent in lighter (rapid eye movement, or REM) sleep and deeper, slow-wave
sleep.
In looking at the links between
different types of activity and next-day cognitive performance, the research
team adjusted for a wide variety of factors that might have distorted the
results, including the amount of moderate or vigorous physical activity that
participants did on the day of the tests.
They also accounted for participants’
average levels of activity and sleep quality across the eight days they were
tracked, as participants who are habitually more active and typically have
higher-quality sleep perform better in cognitive tests.
The team found that more moderate or
vigorous physical activity compared to a person’s average was linked to better
working memory and episodic memory (memory of events) the next day. More sleep
overall was linked to improved episodic and working memory and psychomotor
speed (a measure of how quickly a person detects and responds to the
environment). More slow-wave sleep was linked to better episodic memory.
Conversely, more time spent being
sedentary than usual was linked to worse working memory the next day.
The study is among the first to evaluate
next-day cognitive performance using a “micro-longitudinal” study design where
participants were tracked going about their normal lives rather than having to
stay in a lab.
Among the study limitations, the
researchers noted that the participants were a cognitively healthy group,
meaning the results might not be true for people who have neurocognitive
disorders.
Source: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2024/dec/short-term-cognitive-boost-exercise-may-last-24-hours
Paper: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0929664623002966?via%3Dihub
Source: Short-term cognitive boost from exercise may last for 24 hours – Scents of Science
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