Abstract

The effects of cognitive exercises on the healthy aging population is controversial. Transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) is considered a promising tool for modulating brain oscillation. Research is lacking on its long-lasting cognitive/therapeutic effect. This is the first pilot study to explore the effect of a regimen of cognitive exercises with and without tACS on older adults with dementia. The study groups were 28 individuals (age 56–83 years) enrolled into two groups: Exr Group, who received cognitive exercises only and the Exr + tACS Group who received tACS at 40 Hz simultaneously with cognitive exercises for a period of 4 consecutive weeks, 5 days/week, two 30 min-sessions/day; all the training sessions were tutored. The cognitive exercises were applied using the MindTriggers app. They were assessed at pre and post intervention and also one month after the end of trial (follow-up) with an independent assessment (WMS-IV) as the primary outcome measure. The results show significant cognitive improvement at post-intervention in both groups, while the Exr + tACS protocol lead to superior cognitive improvement at follow-up session. The most important outcomes of this study are: 1) The tutored repeated practice of the MindTriggers app exercises does significantly improve the cognitive functions of older adults with dementia and that that improvement lasts for at least one month after the end of the intervention, and 2) The application of tACS increases the positive effects of cognitive exercises with the positive effect lasting an even longer period of time than exercises alone; in other words we speculate that it may lead to long-term potentiation.

Highlights

  • Due to advances in healthcare and improvements in life style, nowadays, people live longer

  • For the first time, we explore the effect of a regimen of cognitive exercises using the MindTriggers app with and without transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) on older adults with dementia

  • Data from 28 individuals with various degrees of dementia were adopted from the pool of data of an ongoing clinical trial studying the effects of cognitive exercises with or without tACS on the aging population (Moussavi, 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Due to advances in healthcare and improvements in life style, nowadays, people live longer. There is Dementia: tACS and Cognitive Exercises no cure or "vaccine" for dementia, there is hope to delay the onset of the disease and/or slow its progression by keeping a brain wise-healthy life style. This hope is based on the neuroplasticity of the brain achievable even in old age as well as the individuals’ cognitive reserve (Stern, 2012). Constructing a “reserve capacity” has been suggested to help seniors maintain cognitive function (Baltes and Baltes, 1990) This theory was later supported by neuroimaging studies that showed increased contralateral hemispheric activity in right frontal regions for both working memory (Reuter-Lorenz et al, 2000) and episodic memory (Cabeza et al, 2002)

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