Does cardiorespiratory fitness mediate or moderate the association between mid-life physical activity frequency and cognitive function? findings from the 1958 British birth cohort study
Tom Norris, John J. Mitchell, Joanna M. Blodgett, Mark Hamer, Snehal M. Pinto Pereira, Kathleen Bennett, Kathleen Bennett, Kathleen Bennett, Kathleen Bennett

TL;DR
This study investigates whether cardiorespiratory fitness affects the link between mid-life physical activity and later cognitive function.
Contribution
The paper provides first evidence using a four-way decomposition analysis on CRF's role in PA-cognition association.
Findings
In males, mid-life PA frequency was linked to higher cognitive function z-scores, but CRF had minimal mediation/moderation.
No significant effect of PA frequency on cognitive function was found in females.
Results suggest other pathways may underpin the PA-cognition association.
Abstract
Physical activity (PA) is associated with a lower risk of cognitive decline and all-cause dementia in later life. Pathways underpinning this association are unclear but may involve either mediation and/or moderation by cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF). Data on PA frequency (exposure) at 42y, non-exercise testing CRF (NETCRF, mediator/moderator) at 45y and overall cognitive function (outcome) at 50y were obtained from 9,385 participants (50.8% female) in the 1958 British birth cohort study. We used a four-way decomposition approach to examine the relative contributions of mediation and moderation by NETCRF on the association between PA frequency at 42y and overall cognitive function at 50y. In males, the estimated overall effect of 42y PA ≥once per week (vs. <once per week) was a 0.08 (95% confidence interval: 0.04,0.13) higher overall cognitive function z-score at 50y. The estimated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, Environment, Cognitive Aging · Physical Activity and Health · Blood Pressure and Hypertension Studies
