Abstract/Journal Article DZNE-2025-01495

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Role of physical fitness in resistance and cognitive resilience against age‐related pathology

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2025

Alzheimer’s Association International Conference, AAIC 25, TorontoToronto, Canada, 27 Jul 2025 - 31 Jul 20252025-07-272025-07-31 Alzheimer's and dementia 21(S6), e099453 () [10.1002/alz70860_099453]

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Abstract: Background:Cognitive reserve (CR) and brain maintenance enable the brain to maintain performance despite injury and disease while also reducing neural decline by safeguarding brain structure and function. Physical activity is a potential pathway to BM and CR, as fitness relates to better cognition in older adults, though the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. To explore the role of physical fitness in BM and CR, we tested its association with brain pathology and its potential moderation of pathology's impact on cognitive performance.Method:We collected data from 167 cognitively unimpaired participants (mean age 71.57±7.50 years; 70 females) of the ongoing SFB1436 study (www.sfb1435.de; Figure 1). We collected many markers, including global and verbal cognitive performance; aerobic (VO2max) and muscular capacity; blood-based biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (plasma Aβ1-42/1-40, ptau217) and plasticity (serum BDNF, VEGF and Cathepsin-B); PET-derived medial temporal lobe tau burden (MTL DVR, 18F-PI-2620 PET); and MRI-derived volumes of hippocampi, white matter hyperintensities, and perivascular spaces (PVS) in the basal ganglia (BG) and centrum semiovale regions. The tests were two-fold. We first tested whether fitness was associated with lower MTL DVR values, reduced MRI-derived volumes of brain pathology, and better cognition. Using moderation analysis, we then tested whether physical fitness moderated the relationship between pathology and cognition. We relied on ANOVA for model comparison. We adjusted models for age and sex and FDR-corrected multiple comparisons.Result:Participants with better aerobic capacity (VO2max) had lower BG-PVS volumes (Figure 2a) and better global cognitive performance. Those with higher MTL tau burden had worse verbal memory (Figure 2b). We found no evidence of a relationship between physical fitness and Alzheimer's markers, plasticity-related markers, or hippocampal volume. Moderation analysis revealed that physical fitness did not moderate the relationship between MTL tau burden and verbal memory, but model comparison revealed weak evidence for CR against MTL tau.Conclusion:We demonstrated that aerobic fitness is related to lower BG-PVS volumes in old age and showed that aerobic fitness tends to act as CR proxy against MTL tau pathology. Aerobic fitness may help maintain cerebrovascular and glymphatic dysfunction in old age, thereby mitigating cognitive decline.

Classification:

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Multimodal Neuroimaging (AG Maaß)
  2. Clinical Neurophysiology and Memory (AG Düzel)
  3. Neuroprotection (AG Müller)
  4. Molecular biomarkers for predictive diagnostics of neurodegenerative diseases (AG Wiltfang)
Research Program(s):
  1. 353 - Clinical and Health Care Research (POF4-353) (POF4-353)

Appears in the scientific report 2025
Database coverage:
Medline ; Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 ; OpenAccess ; Clarivate Analytics Master Journal List ; Current Contents - Clinical Medicine ; DEAL Wiley ; Essential Science Indicators ; IF >= 10 ; JCR ; SCOPUS ; Science Citation Index Expanded ; Web of Science Core Collection
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The record appears in these collections:
Document types > Articles > Journal Article
Institute Collections > GÖ DZNE > GÖ DZNE-AG Wiltfang
Document types > Presentations > Abstracts
Institute Collections > MD DZNE > MD DZNE-AG Müller
Institute Collections > MD DZNE > MD DZNE-AG Düzel
Institute Collections > MD DZNE > MD DZNE-AG Maaß
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 Record created 2025-12-30, last modified 2025-12-31


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