Mental
exercise helps maintain some Seniors’ thinking
skills
Certain mental exercises can offset some of the
expected decline in older adults' thinking skills
and show promise for maintaining cognitive abilities
needed to do everyday tasks such as shopping, making
meals and handling finances, according to a new
study.
The research, funded by the National Institutes of
Health (NIH) and published in the Dec. 20, 2006,
Journal of the American Medical Association,
showed that some of the benefits of short-term
cognitive training persisted for as long as five
years.
The Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and
Vital Elderly, or ACTIVE, Study is the first
randomized, controlled trial to demonstrate
long-lasting, positive effects of brief cognitive
training in older adults. However, testing indicated
that the training did not improve the participants’
ability to tackle everyday tasks, and more research
is needed to translate the findings from the
laboratory into interventions that prove effective
at home.
The ACTIVE trial was funded by the National
Institute on Aging (NIA) and the National Institute
of Nursing Research (NINR), both components of NIH.
Sherry L. Willis, Ph.D., of Pennsylvania State
University in State College, Pa., and co-authors
report the findings on behalf of ACTIVE
investigators at the study’s six sites: Hebrew
SeniorLife, Boston; Indiana University School of
Medicine, Indianapolis; Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore; Pennsylvania State University; University
of Alabama at Birmingham; and University of Florida,
Gainesville (in collaboration with Wayne State
University, Detroit), and the data coordinating
center at the New England Research Institutes,
Watertown, Mass.
“This large trial found that community-dwelling
seniors who received cognitive training had less of
a decline in certain thinking skills than their
peers who did not have training. The study addresses
a very important hypothesis — that interventions can
be designed to maintain cognitive function,” says
NIA Director Richard J. Hodes, M.D. “The challenge
now is to further examine these interventions and
others to see how they can be employed in real-world
settings.”
“Cognitive decline is known to precede loss of
functional ability in older adults. It affects
everyday activities such as driving or following
instructions on a medicine bottle,” says NINR
Director Patricia A. Grady, Ph.D., R.N. “Research to
identify effective ways of delaying this decline is
important because it may help individuals, and our
aging citizenry, maintain greater independence as
they grow older.”
The ACTIVE Study included 2,802 adults aged 65 and
older who were living independently and had normal
cognitive and functional status at the beginning of
the study. Participants were randomly assigned to
four groups. Three groups took part in training that
targeted a specific cognitive ability — memory,
reasoning or speed of processing. The fourth group
received no cognitive training.
People in the three intervention groups attended up
to 10 training sessions lasting 60 to 75 minutes
each, over a five- to six-week time period. The
memory group learned strategies for remembering word
lists and sequences of items, text, and story ideas
and details. The reasoning group learned strategies
for finding the pattern in a letter or word series
and identifying the next item in a series. The
speed-of-processing group learned ways to identify
an object on a computer screen at increasingly brief
exposures, while quickly noting where another object
was located on the screen.
After the initial training, 60 percent of those who
completed the initial training took part in
75-minute “booster” sessions designed to maintain
improvements gained from the initial sessions.
The investigators tested the participants at
baseline, after the intervention and annually over
five years. They found:
-
Immediately after the initial training, 87
percent of the speed-training group, 74 percent
of the reasoning group and 26 percent of the
memory group showed improvement in the skills
taught.
-
After five years, people in each group performed
better on tests in their respective areas of
training than did people in the control group.
The reasoning-training and speed-training groups
who received booster training had the greatest
benefit.
“The improvements seen after the training roughly
counteract the degree of decline in cognitive
performance that we would expect to see over a
seven- to 14-year period among older people without
dementia,” says Dr. Willis.
The researchers also looked at the training’s
effects on participants’ everyday lives. After five
years, all three intervention groups reported less
difficulty than the control group in tasks such as
preparing meals, managing money and doing housework.
Only the effect of reasoning training on
self-reported performance of daily tasks was
statistically significant. Those who received
speed-of-processing training and follow-up booster
training scored better on how quickly and accurately
they could find items on a pantry shelf, make
change, read medicine dosing instructions, place
telephone calls and react to road traffic signs.
“Beyond middle age, people worry about their mental
sharpness getting ‘rusty.’ This study offers hope
that cognitive training may be useful,” notes
Richard Suzman, Ph.D., director of the NIA’s
Behavioral and Social Research Program, which
sponsored the work. “ACTIVE has shown that
relatively brief targeted cognitive exercises can
produce durable changes in the skills taught. I
would now like to see studies aimed at producing
more generalized changes, perhaps through more
intensive and broader interventions.”