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Clinical Trials/NCT00979069
NCT00979069
Completed
Not Applicable

Aerobic Exercise to Improve Executive Language Function in Older Adults

US Department of Veterans Affairs2 sites in 1 country20 target enrollmentSeptember 2010
ConditionsAging

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Aging
Sponsor
US Department of Veterans Affairs
Enrollment
20
Locations
2
Primary Endpoint
Executive Language Functions
Status
Completed
Last Updated
11 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to see if exercise can improve brain function in older adults

Detailed Description

Recently, considerable attention has been devoted to examining the beneficial relationship between cognition and aerobic exercise in older adults. Specifically, the effects are thought to involve higher order cognitive processes, such as working memory, switching between tasks, and inhibiting irrelevant information, all of which are thought to be sub- served, in part, by the frontal lobes (Colcombe et al., 2006). Importantly, these areas also are most susceptible to age-related decline (Raz, 2000) and are essential resources for language production (Kemper \& Sumner, 2001; Murray \& Lenz, 2001). However, despite promising cognitive improvement, changes in frontally-mediated executive language functions have been widely ignored. This is unfortunate considering impaired word retrieval compromises communicative effectiveness, leading to frustration, depression, and withdrawal. Perhaps more importantly, communication ineffectiveness, particularly in the elderly, leads to difficulties interacting with health care professionals leading to further health care burdens. Since cognition, and specifically word retrieval difficulties, usually remain untreated, it is important to find treatment strategies for minimizing these deficits. Therefore, the short-term goal and the purpose of this proposal is to examine the potential of aerobic exercise to improve executive language function in older adults.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
September 2010
End Date
January 2012
Last Updated
11 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Consent of participants' primary health care physicians to participate in the aerobic exercise.
  • Patients must not have participated in any consistent exercise program or experimental study for at least 3 months prior to enrollment.
  • They must be capable of providing informed consent and complying with the trial procedures.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Demented as defined by the Modified Mini Mental Status Exam.
  • Unalterable travel schedules.
  • Site accessibility constraints.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Executive Language Functions

Time Frame: number of correct words at pre and post separated by 12 weeks

The Verbal Fluency Test is demonstrated to be reliable and valid among adults aged 50 to 89 (Delis, et al., 2001; Delis, Kramer, Kaplan, \& Hodnack, 2004). The Verbal Fluency Test has three conditions, Letter Verbal Fluency, Category Verbal Fluency, and Switching Verbal Fluency. Each was randomized at pre- and post-12 week timeline and equated for difficulty. Letter Verbal Fluency assesses the number of words beginning with certain letters that participants can generate within 60 seconds,the Category Verbal Fluency assesses the number of words within particular categories participants can generate within 60 seconds, and the Switching Verbal Fluency assesses the number of words while alternating between different categories participants can generate within 60 seconds. For each condition (letter, category, and switching) a total score representing the total number of correct

Study Sites (2)

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