Abstract
Background:
Links between physical activity and dementia are based primarily on cross-sectional data or studies with unsatisfactory follow-up.
Objective:
We leveraged three decades of follow-up from an established cohort to determine whether physical activity in midlife is associated with late-life cognition and dementia.
Methods:
The Johns Hopkins Precursors study (
Results:
No physical activity measure from 1978 was associated with late-life cognition or onset of dementia. Both MET h/day (β= 0.007, 95% CI: 0.002, 0.013) and regular exercise (β= 0.357, 95% CI: 0.202, 0.513) in 2006, however, were associated with better cognition in 2008.
Conclusion:
Findings from this 30-year cohort study that physical activity measured recently, but not in mid-life, is associated with late-life cognition fits with null findings from randomized trials and other observational studies with extensive follow-up. Cross-sectional findings may be misleading due to reverse causation.
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