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The Link Between Physical Activity and Brain Health in Healthy Adults

RECRUITINGSponsored by Technical University of Madrid
Actively Recruiting
SponsorTechnical University of Madrid
Started2024-11-25
Est. completion2026-01
Eligibility
Age40 Years – 75 Years
Healthy vol.Accepted

Summary

The goal of this observational study is to investigate the cross-sectional relationship between physical activity and brain health from a multiscale approach (neuropsychology, neuroimaging, peripheral biomarkers and genetics) in former athletes and sedentary individuals. The main question it aims to answer is: Do former athletes have better brain structure than sedentary people? Evaluating the differences in neurodegenerative processes between competitive training and sedentary and inactivity.

Eligibility

Age: 40 Years – 75 YearsHealthy volunteers accepted
Inclusion Criteria:

* Group A: ex-athletes and continue to perform regular physical exercise (minimum 3 days/week of moderate-vigorous intensity).
* Group B: sedentary individuals, (i.e., perform \<150 min of moderate intensity exercise per week or IPAQ score\<600 MET min/week).
* In both groups (A and B) the conditions of physical exercise or sedentary lifestyle must have been maintained for at least 6 months prior to the evaluations.
* Not having a history of neurological or psychiatric disorder or suffering from a serious medical condition

Exclusion Criteria:

* Medical conditions that have a high risk of associated cognitive symptoms.
* Severe head injury with loss of consciousness within the previous 5 years.
* Alcoholism (\>3 alcoholic drinks per day).
* Chronic use of anxiolytics, neuroleptics, narcotics, anticonvulsants, or sedative hypnotics.
* Hearing or visual impairment that would preclude testing
* History of neurological disease with clinically relevant impact on cognition (e.g. cerebrovascular disease).
* Incidental structural brain findings with impact on cognitive impairment or survival (e.g., malignant brain tumor).
* Presence of severe systemic disease (e.g., cancer under treatment).
* Consumption of anabolic substances.
* Problems understanding spoken or written Spanish.
* Those with pacemakers or metallic implants that may interfere with the MRI.

Conditions4

Alzheimer DiseaseAlzheimer's DiseaseInactivityPreventive Therapy

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