Cognitive training, exercise training or combined training? A comparative effectiveness research study on subjective and objective cognitive outcomes in multiple sclerosis
Naomi Gyger, Tobias Monschein, Melanie Filser, Sharon Bätge, Alina Renner, Melanie Roth, Orhan Aktas, Philipp Albrecht, Hans-Peter Hartung, Iris-Katharina Penner

TL;DR
This study compares the effectiveness of cognitive training, exercise, and their combination on cognitive outcomes in people with multiple sclerosis.
Contribution
The study reveals that combining cognitive and exercise training may offer longer-lasting cognitive benefits than either alone.
Findings
All three treatments improved subjective cognitive performance, with the combined group showing the longest-lasting effect.
Objective cognitive performance improved in the treadmill walking and combined groups, but not in cognitive training alone.
The combined training group showed stable effects over six months.
Abstract
Cognitive impairment (CI) in people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) may be present from the onset, is common, and has a profound impact on those affected. This study compared the effectiveness of three different therapeutic approaches (computerized cognitive training, BrainStim (BS); treadmill walking (TW); combined training (BS + TW)) on subjective and objective cognitive functioning in pwMS and CI. 61 pwMS were recruited from the Department of Neurology outpatient clinic of the University Hospital Düsseldorf and neurologists in private practice. After screening for eligibility, pwMS were randomized into three treatment arms: 1) BS, 2) TW, 3) BS + TW. Subjective and objective cognitive functioning were evaluated before and after intervention, including the Perceived Deficits Questionnaire (PDQ-20) and Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT) as primary end points, respectively. 46 pwMS…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Sclerosis Research Studies · Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Research · Long-Term Effects of COVID-19
