Graham
Mansfield, Unsplash.com.
Many studies carried out over the past decades have explored the
relationship between mental and physical health, showing that the two are often
interlinked. One well-established indicator of overall physical health is
cardiorespiratory fitness, which is the ability of the heart and lungs to
supply oxygen while a person is engaged in sustained physical activity.
An international team of researchers, led by the University of Castilla-La
Mancha in collaboration with the Karolinska Institutet, reviewed a large pool
of past studies that explored the link between cardiorespiratory fitness and
numerous mental health disorders.
Their paper, published in Nature Mental Health, suggests
that better cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with a significantly lower
risk of developing dementia, depression, and psychotic disorders.
"Our study emerged from a growing interest in understanding mental
health from a broader, preventive perspective," Dr. Bruno Bizzozero
Peroni, post-doctoral researcher at Karolinska Institutet and senior author of
the paper, told Medical Xpress.
"While physical activity has long been linked to better mental health,
we noticed that cardiorespiratory fitness—a more objective and integrative
measure of the body's ability to deliver and use oxygen during exercise—had not
been systematically synthesized across mental and neurocognitive
outcomes."
Exploring the link between fitness and mental health
The main goal of the recent work by Bizzozero Peroni and his colleagues was
to explore the strength and consistency with which cardiorespiratory fitness is
associated with the risk of developing various mental and neurocognitive
disorders.
To do this, they analyzed the findings of past global studies that focused
on distinct disorders, including anxiety disorders, depression, dementia,
schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, bipolar disorder, ADHD disorder,
obsessive-compulsive disorder, somatic symptom disorders, and sleep–wake
disorders.
"We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 27 prospective
cohort studies, collectively including more than 4 million participants across
all age groups," explained Bizzozero Peroni.
"These studies assessed cardiorespiratory fitness—typically measured
through exercise tests or estimated capacity—in individuals who were free of
mental and neurocognitive disorders at baseline and then followed them over
time to examine the incidence of these conditions."
By pooling the results of these 27 research studies, the team was able to
quantify the associations between high vs. low cardiorespiratory fitness and
the risk of developing different mental health and neurocognitive conditions.
To estimate the risk that the people included in the pooled dataset would
develop specific disorders over time, the team calculated so-called hazard
ratios (HR).
"We also specifically examined studies that reported associations per
1-MET increase in cardiorespiratory fitness, allowing us to assess whether even
small improvements in fitness were linked to reduced risk," said Bizzozero
Peroni.
"A MET (metabolic equivalent of task) is a unit that reflects the
energy cost of physical activity—for example, roughly the difference between
resting and very light activities such as slow walking."
The researchers' analyses revealed that better (vs.
worst) cardiorespiratory fitness was consistently associated
with a substantially lower risk of developing various disorders in adulthood.
Specifically, it was found to be linked to a 36% lower risk of depression, 39%
lower risk of dementia, 29% lower risk of psychotic disorders, and a 10% lower
risk of anxiety (even if the association was not statistically significant in
this case).
"For other mental health outcomes, the available evidence was limited
to single studies, which prevented us from conducting pooled analyses and
drawing robust conclusions," said Bizzozero Peroni.
"In addition, most of the evidence comes from middle-aged adult populations, highlighting the need for more
longitudinal research in children, adolescents, young adults and older
adults."
Interestingly, Bizzozero Peroni and his colleagues found that even modest
improvements in fitness, such as an increase of one MET, were linked to
significant reductions in risk—about 5% for depression and 19% for dementia.
This suggests that the benefits of cardiorespiratory fitness for mental
health are not exclusive to highly athletic individuals, but that they could
instead also be achieved at a general population level via fitness-based
interventions.
Informing mental health
prevention programs
The results of the team's systematic review and meta-analysis could soon
inspire further research exploring the mechanisms underlying the link between
fitness-related measures and psychiatric or neurocognitive disorders. In
addition, they could inspire the development of new interventions or
preventative programs for specific disorders that focus on improving people's
fitness levels.
"From a public health perspective, these findings highlight
cardiorespiratory fitness as a measurable, modifiable and scalable factor that
could play a key role in prevention," said Bizzozero Peroni. "It
supports the idea of integrating fitness assessment into routine health
evaluations, including mental health."
As part of their future studies, Bizzozero Peroni and his colleagues would
like to perform further analyses that include data collected from
underrepresented populations. For instance, they would like to explore the link
between cardiorespiratory fitness and mental health in children, adolescents,
young adults, older adults and people living outside of Europe or North
America.
"This will be essential to ensure that findings are globally
applicable and reflect different life stages," explained Bizzozero Peroni.
"In addition, there is a need for more robust longitudinal
epidemiological studies to strengthen causal inference and better understand
how cardiorespiratory fitness influences the development of mental and
neurocognitive disorders over time.
"Finally, we are interested in further exploring the underlying biological mechanisms—such as neuroplasticity, inflammation and stress regulation—that may help explain these associations within population-based research frameworks."
Source: Cardiorespiratory fitness may cut dementia, depression and psychosis risk

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