Author: Wang, Ruitong; Yan, Wenxin; Du, Min; Tao, Liyuan; Liu, Jue
Title: The effect of physical activity interventions on cognition function in patients with diabetes: A systematic review and metaâ€analysis Cord-id: unou2lzm Document date: 2021_2_22
ID: unou2lzm
Snippet: BACKGROUND: In recent years, studies have revealed that cognition may be impaired by glucose metabolism disorder. Meanwhile, physical activity has been demonstrated to maintain blood glucose. This metaâ€analysis was conducted to assess the effect of physical activity on cognition in patients with diabetes and provide evidence for the treatment of cognition impairment among them. METHODS: We searched studies published in five databases from 1 January 1984 to 29 August 2020. A randomâ€effect or
Document: BACKGROUND: In recent years, studies have revealed that cognition may be impaired by glucose metabolism disorder. Meanwhile, physical activity has been demonstrated to maintain blood glucose. This metaâ€analysis was conducted to assess the effect of physical activity on cognition in patients with diabetes and provide evidence for the treatment of cognition impairment among them. METHODS: We searched studies published in five databases from 1 January 1984 to 29 August 2020. A randomâ€effect or fixedâ€effect metaâ€analysis was used to estimate the pooled effect of physical activity on the change of cognition throughout intervention duration and postâ€intervention cognition scores by standardized mean difference (SMD) and its 95% confidence interval (CI). We used funnel plots to evaluate the publication bias, I (2) statistic to evaluate the heterogeneity and did subgroup analysis stratified by sample size and followâ€up time. RESULTS: Five eligible studies involving 2581 patients with diabetes were included. The pooled effect of physical activity on cognition improvement in patients with diabetes was significant (SMD = 0.98, 95% CI: 0.34–1.62), while the effect on postâ€intervention cognition scores was not significant (SMD = 0.35, 95% CI: −0.04–0.73). In the subgroup analysis, the pooled effect was significantly higher in studies of followâ€up time less than 1 year (SMD = 2.14, 95% CI: 1.63–2.64), while observing no significant effect in studies of followâ€up time over 1 year (SMD = 0.10, 95% CI: −0.11–0.32). CONCLUSIONS: Physical activity is beneficial to improving cognition in patients with diabetes. However, the longâ€term effect needs to be explored in future studies.
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