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Body composition, vascular health, cardiorespiratory fitness, lung function, muscle architecture, and physical activity in people with young onset dementia: a case-control study

  • Lawrence D. Hayes
  • , Ethan C.J. Berry*
  • , Nilihan E.M. Sanal-Hayes
  • , Nicholas F. Sculthorpe
  • , Duncan S. Buchan
  • , Marie Mclaughlin
  • , Sowmya Munishankar
  • , Debbie Tolson
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    19 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: Body composition, blood pressure, estimated maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max), lung function, physical activity, muscle architecture, and endothelial function had not previously been examined in people with young onset dementia. Therefore, the study measured these variables in a young onset dementia group, compared them to age-matched controls.

    METHODS: Estimated VO2max (via the Astrand-Rhyming test), body composition, blood pressure, lung function (via spirometry), muscle architecture (via ultrasonography) and endothelial function (via flow mediated dilation) were assessed. Physical activity was measured using ActiGraph accelerometers for 7 days.

    RESULTS: We recruited 33 participants (16 young onset dementia, 17 controls). The young onset dementia group had shorter fascicle lengths of the vastus lateralis, were sedentary for longer over a seven-day period, and completed less moderate-vigorous physical activity than controls (p=0.028, d=0.81; large effect, p=0.029, d=0.54; moderate effect, and p=0.014, d=0.97; large effect, respectively for pairwise comparisons). Pairwise comparisons suggest no differences at the p<0.05 level between young onset dementia and controls for estimated VO2max (despite a moderate effect size [d=0.66]), height, body mass, BMI, blood pressure, light physical activity, lung function, muscle thickness, pennation angle, or endothelial function.

    CONCLUSION: This study highlights differences between people with young onset dementia and controls, underscoring the need for multicomponent exercise interventions. Future interventions should target muscle architecture, increase moderate-vigorous physical activity, and reduce sedentariness, with the goal of improving quality of life and promoting functional independence.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)277-286
    Number of pages10
    JournalThe American Journal of Medicine
    Volume138
    Issue number2
    Early online date30 Aug 2024
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 28 Feb 2025

    Keywords

    • young-onset dementia
    • neurodegenerative disease
    • body composition
    • blood pressure
    • physical fitness
    • lung function
    • physical activity
    • muscle architecture
    • endothelial function

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