Cognitive Decline Trajectories and Time-of-Day Physical Activity Patterns: The ARIC Neurocognitive Study
Sunan Gao, Ciprian Crainiceanu, Anis Davoudi, Ryan Dougherty, Lacey Etzkorn, Amal Wanigatunga, Adam Spira, Jennifer Schrack

TL;DR
This study explores how different patterns of cognitive decline in older adults are linked to physical activity levels at different times of the day.
Contribution
The study reveals that slower cognitive decline is associated with higher midday physical activity, offering a potential non-invasive method for detecting cognitive decline.
Findings
Slower cognitive decline is linked to higher midday physical activity levels.
Executive function decline shows the longest association with physical activity patterns.
Reduced cognitive decline correlates with better afternoon activity metrics like lower sedentary time.
Abstract
Cognitive decline may influence physical activity (PA) patterns in late life, but how cognitive trajectories differentially impact PA throughout the day remains unexplored. We established cognitive trajectories in 2,140 initially cognitively unimpaired Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities participants (mean age 74.1±4.5 years, 59.9% female) over 7.9±1.7 years of follow-up (visits 5-9). Trajectories were derived using linear mixed-effects models assessing overall cognition, language, memory, and executive function across visits. In 810 participants with subsequent accelerometry data, we examined the association between cognitive trajectories and time-of-day PA patterns measured using wrist-worn devices (visit 9). Function-on-scalar regression revealed time-dependent associations between cognitive trajectories and minute-by-minute PA. After adjustment for demographics, health factors, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Older Adults Driving Studies · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
