Frail Elderly, Elderly, Aging, Aging Frailty, Sarcopenia in Elderly
Conditions
Keywords
Dual-task training, Resistance training, Core-stability training, Cognitive training, Functional mobility, Cognitive functions, Quality of life, High-resolution EEG, Event-Related Potentials (ERP), Muscle synergy analysis, Cortico-muscular coherence
Brief summary
The overall aim of this project, which is based upon the interdisciplinary expertise of four research groups within the University of Rome Foro Italico, in the macro-areas of psychology, bioengineering, physiology, and internal medicine, is to improve the overall health and well-being of community-dwelling frail older adults, who are often suffering from non-communicable diseases, by means of an integration of innovative cognitive and resistance-core training. Forty-five frail or pre-frail community-dwelling older adults aged ≥65 years will be randomly assigned to three 8-week intervention groups: A) resistance training; B) resistance-core training; C) cognitive-resistance-core training. Comparison between groups C and B will show the effects of an innovative cognitive-motor dual-task training method, which will incorporate principles of modern psychotherapeutic approaches to boost physical training, and to improve cognitive, emotional, and mood disturbances in older ages. Comparison between groups B and A will focus on the motor component of the intervention, showing the effects of adding specific core-exercises to a traditional resistance training program on muscle strength, power, and the ability to safely carry out functional abilities of daily life. As outcomes, clinical and psychological scales, cognitive tasks, and their underlying cortical mechanisms will be measured. In addition, state-of-art physiological and biomechanical methods will be used to study human kinematics, muscle synergies, and cortico-muscular coherence furthering some important neurophysiological mechanisms of motor control underlying the execution of functional tasks. The results of this project, therefore, will be of great relevance for the advancement of training-exercise methodology as well as unravelling central and peripheral mechanisms underlying frailty with the final goal of improving the quality of life in older individuals.
Detailed description
The study sought to exploit a method known as Bilateral Alternating Stimulation (BAS), which was introduced within the framework of Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) psychotherapy as a central component of a protocol designed to facilitate the processing of traumatic memories. Subsequently, this procedure was incorporated into the Adaptive Information Processing (AIP) model, according to which bilateral stimulation promotes the integration of dysfunctional information within adaptive memory networks. Various theoretical interpretations have been proposed to explain the underlying mechanisms, including the model of interhemispheric interaction, which suggests an enhancement of communication between the cerebral hemispheres (Christman et al., 2003). Furthermore, alternating bilateral stimulation modulates interhemispheric coherence, suggesting a reorganisation of communication processes between hemispheres that could facilitate the integration of cognitive and emotional information. It also modulates prefrontal cortex activity and fronto-limbic connectivity, suggesting a reorganisation of cognitive and emotional control processes. More recent electroencephalographic (EEG) evidence confirms the involvement of frontal areas, in line with theoretical models that attribute these effects to the modulation of attentional and executive systems.
Interventions
Basic routine of resistance training based on multi-articular and mono-articular exercises, such as leg press, shoulder press, leg extension, leg curl, biceps curl, triceps pushdown, calf raises.
This core-focused motor training followed a motor program emphasizing trunk stability and postural control. Exercises targeted core muscle activation, postural alignment, and coordination during standing and walking tasks, while maintaining the same overall level of physical effort and safety constraints as the general motor training group.
Cognitive-Motor Dual-Task Training (CMDT) program in which physical exercises were systematically combined with concurrent cognitive demands. The CMDT protocol was designed to simultaneously engage motor performance, executive functions, and attentional control, thereby enhancing the integration of cognitive and motor processes.
Sponsors
Study design
Intervention model description
this is a 3-arm study but the two motor-only interventions could bemerged into a single control group. This is justified by their functional equivalence and by the need to optimize statistical power and interpretability when comparing cognitive-motor training with motor-only exercise.
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Pre-frail/frail community-dwelling older adults * Aged ≥65 years * Community-dwelling
Exclusion criteria
* Cognitive decline (mini-mental state examination \<25/30) * Neurological disorders * Conditions impairing the ability to carry out exercise training (e.g., Parkinson's disease; multiple sclerosis; stroke) * Depression treated with pharmacological therapy or that have incurred in falls in the last two years.
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Anxiety levels | At T0 (enrollment), T1 (4 weeks), T1 (8 weeks) | Anxiety levels were assessed using the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Form Y (STAI). The STAI is widely considered a standard instrument for the assessment of anxiety and consists of two self-report subscales designed to measure state anxiety and trait anxiety. State anxiety (STAI-Y1) refers to a transient emotional condition characterized by feelings of tension, apprehension, and heightened autonomic activity. In contrast, trait anxiety (STAI-Y2) reflects a relatively stable personality disposition associated with a tendency to perceive situations as threatening and to respond with persistent worry, agitation, and nervousness. Total scores for each subscale range from 20 to 80, with commonly adopted interpretative thresholds indicating low or absent anxiety (20-37), moderate anxiety (38-44), and high anxiety (45-80). |
| Depression level | At T0 (enrollment), T1 (4 weeks), T1 (8 weeks) | Depression levels were assessed using the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), which is a self-report instrument used to assess the severity of depressive symptoms in adolescents and adults. The questionnaire consists of 21 items that investigate cognitive, affective, and somatic symptoms of depression. Each item is rated on a scale of 0 to 3, with reference to the last two weeks. The total score, obtained from the sum of the responses (range 0-63), reflects the severity of depressive symptoms. According to standard interpretative guidelines, scores are classified as no or minimal (0-13) depression, mild (14-19), moderate (20-28), and severe (29-63) depression. Participants completed the questionnaires independently. |
| Cognitive test during EEG recording | At T0 (enrollment), T1 (4 weeks), T1 (8 weeks) | A visuomotor discrimination response task (DRT), based on a Go/No-go paradigm, was included to assess executive control processes involved in task anticipation, including both cognitive and motor preparation, which are known to be particularly sensitive to aging and to cognitive-motor training effects. This task is particularly well-suited for electrophysiological investigation, as it reliably elicits pre-stimulus anticipatory ERP components, such as the Bereitschaftspotential (BP) and the prefrontal negativity (pN). These components index motor preparation and top-down cognitive control, respectively, allowing the assessment of predictive brain activity preceding action execution. For this reason, during the DRT, high-density EEG was also recorded. |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Balance | At T0 (enrollment), T1 (4 weeks), T1 (8 weeks) | Balance was assessed using the Berg Balance Scale (BBS), which is a standardized clinical tool used to assess static and dynamic balance in older adults. It consists of 14 functional tasks representative of everyday activities; each is scored on a 5-point scale (0-4). Total scores range from 0 to 56, with higher scores indicating better balance and lower fall risk (41-56: low fall risk, 21-40: medium fall risk, 0-20: high fall risk). The BBS is widely used in clinical and research settings due to its high reliability and validity in aging populations. The BBS was administered according to standardized procedures by trained evaluators. |
Countries
Italy
Contacts
University of Rome 'Foro Italico'
University of Rome 'Foro Italico'
University of Rome 'Foro Italico'
University of Rome 'Foro Italico'