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Acute effects of moderate-intensity continuous physical exercise performed with different amounts of muscle mass on executive function in healthy young adults: a randomized trial

Morais, Marcos José; de Oliveira, Vinnycius Nunes; Viana, Ricardo Borges; Andrade, Marilia Santos; Vancini, Rodrigo Luiz; Arida, Ricardo Mario; Costa, Gustavo De Conti Teixeira; Campos, Mário Hebling; Vieira, Carlos Alexandre; Weiss, Katja; Knechtle, Beat; de Lira, Claudio Andre Barbosa (2023). Acute effects of moderate-intensity continuous physical exercise performed with different amounts of muscle mass on executive function in healthy young adults: a randomized trial. EXCLI Journal, 22:1032-1046.

Abstract

We examined the effect of amount of muscle mass involved in moderate-intensity continuous physical exercise on executive function. To this end, fifty-five participants completed two acute physical exercise sessions on an airbike ergometer using the upper and lower limbs simultaneously and only the upper limbs, and a resting control session in a randomized order. The physical exercise session lasted 30 min and was performed at moderate intensity (between 64 %-76 % of maximal heart rate evaluated in graded maximal exercise testing). Participants took the Stroop test (congruent and incongruent trials) before and after the sessions to assess executive performance. For the congruent trial, both physical exercise interventions improved executive function performance (pre vs. post, p-value = 0.002 and 0.003 for physical exercise with upper limbs and physical exercise with upper and lower limbs, respectively). Furthermore, executive function performance was higher after the physical exercise interventions than after the control session (p-value = 0.002 and 0.004 for physical exercise with upper limbs and physical exercise with upper and lower limbs, respectively). For the incongruent trial, both physical exercise interventions also improved executive function performance (pre vs. post, p-value < 0.001 for physical exercise with upper limbs and physical exercise with upper and lower limbs, respectively). However, there were no significant differences after both physical exercise interventions and resting control session (p-value = 0.175). Executive function (congruent trial) was positively impacted by acute aerobic physical exercise regardless of the amount of muscle mass involved (upper limbs or upper plus lower limbs). Therefore, we recommend aerobic physical exercise with less or more muscle mass involved to improve cognitive function.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Institute of General Practice
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Life Sciences > Molecular Medicine
Life Sciences > Animal Science and Zoology
Life Sciences > Pharmacology
Life Sciences > Drug Discovery
Uncontrolled Keywords:attention; cognition; cognitive function; inhibitory control; physical activity
Language:English
Date:2023
Deposited On:13 Dec 2023 10:02
Last Modified:26 Feb 2025 02:44
Publisher:IfADo - Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Dortmund
ISSN:1611-2156
OA Status:Gold
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.17179/excli2023-6434
PubMed ID:38023569
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