Exercise training may delay the decline in cognitive function that occurs in individuals who are at risk of or have Alzheimer’s disease, with aerobic exercise possibly having the most favorable effect, according to a review of 19 previous studies on the topic.

Approximately 5.3 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease. Alzheimer’s-related medical costs in the United States are estimated to exceed $1.1 trillion by 2050 unless effective methods to prevent and treat Alzheimer’s disease are identified.

Exercise training is recommended as a cost-effective lifestyle therapeutic option to improve brain health in older adults, with improvements in cognitive function mediated by positive neurophysiological changes.

Consequently, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that older adults perform at least 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise training (e.g. brisk walking), 75 minutes per week of vigorous-intensity aerobic exercise training, or a combination of the two supplemented by muscle strengthening activities (e.g. dynamic resistance training) on 2 or more days per week.

However, not all studies of exercise and older adults have proven the benefits of exercise. We don’t know for sure whether exercise slows mental decline or improves older adults’ ability to think and make decisions.

Gregory Panza, an exercise physiologist at Hartford Hospital and a doctoral candidate at the University of Connecticut, and co-authors designed a study to learn whether exercise could delay or improve symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease.

They reviewed 19 studies that examined the effect of an exercise training program on cognitive function in older adults who were at risk for or diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

The studies included 1,145 older adults, most of whom were in their mid-to late 70s. Of the participants, 65% were at risk for Alzheimer’s disease and 35% had been diagnosed with the disease.

The authors discovered that older adults who did aerobic exercise by itself experienced a three times greater level of improvement in cognitive function than those who participated in combined aerobic training and strength training exercises.

They also confirmed that the amount of exercise WHO recommends for older adults was reinforced by the studies they examined.

Finally, they found that older adults in the no-exercise control groups in the studies faced declines in cognitive function. Meanwhile, the older adults who exercised showed small improvements in cognitive function no matter what type of exercise they did.

“Our study may be the first to show that for older adults who are at risk for or who have Alzheimer’s disease, aerobic exercise may be more effective than other types of exercise in preserving the ability to think and make decisions,” Panza and colleagues said.

The findings are published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.