At a glance
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The Effect of Physical Activity on Cognition Relative to APOE Genotype (PAAD-2)
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Physical Activity Condition for Healthy and 3 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 180 participants across 1 site.
Signals
Detailed Summary
Physical activity and Alzheimer's disease (PAAD-2) is a randomized control trial that will assess the effects of exercise on middle-aged (40-65 years) cognitively normal adults who have a heightened risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD) due to family history (FH+). The investigators will also assess the extent to which this effect is moderated by apolipoprotein epsilon-4 (APOE4) carrier status, and will gather critical new experimental evidence on the use of physical activity to improve cognitive performance by persons at the greatest risk of Alzheimer's disease.
Study Details
Timeline
Arms & Interventions
Subjects will be asked to attend virtual exercise sessions 3 times a week for 1 year.
Participants in the usual care control will maintain their normal health practices for 1 year. Participants will receive a bi-weekly health newsletter and will be contacted bi-weekly to answer any questions and inquire about the participant's health. Participants self-reported physical activity will be assessed monthly. In this fashion, participants will be contacted by staff every week. Usual care control participants that complete all study related activities including pre-, mid-, and post-test will receive a short-term YMCA membership after post-test.
Interventions
Subjects will attend virtual group exercise sessions 3x/week for 1 year. Each subject will be encouraged to walk at a moderate intensity (target heart rate (HR)= 40-59% HR reserve) dependent on resting HR and age. Subjects will perform aerobic exercise on their own and resistance exercises will be completed in virtual exercise sessions with an instructor 1 hour/day for 3 days/week for 1 year. At the exercise sessions, these participants will be asked to record measures of the exercises completed and may be asked to provide measures of heart rate (assessed by palpation for 20-seconds) and rate of perceived exertion (RPE). They will be asked to submit exercise logs providing this information. Data from exercise logs and exercise specialist records will be reviewed for evidence of progression, consistent attainment of moderate intensity, and with respect to the prescribed duration of the aerobic and strength training components.