341 results match your criteria: "Institute of Human Movement Sciences and Sport[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • A healthy lifestyle can help prevent or delay dementia, but many adults aren't active enough.
  • Hybrid physical training, which mixes exercise at a center and at home, might help older people stay mentally sharp but hasn't been studied much.
  • This article explains what hybrid physical training is, its pros and cons, and suggests using digital technology to help older people exercise at home, especially those with mobility challenges.
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Background: Early detection of cognitive impairment is among the top research priorities aimed at reducing the global burden of dementia. Currently used screening tools have high sensitivity but lack specificity at their original cut-off, while decreasing the cut-off was repeatedly shown to improve specificity, but at the cost of lower sensitivity. In 2012, a new screening tool was introduced that aims to overcome these limitations - the Quick mild cognitive impairment screen (Qmci).

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Background: Many stroke survivors remain with residual cognitive and motor impairments despite receiving timely acute and sub-acute rehabilitation. This indicates that rehabilitation following stroke should be continuous to meet the needs of individual stroke patients. Both cognitive and motor functions are essential for mastering daily life and, therefore, should be aimed at with rehabilitation.

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Background: Vagally-mediated heart rate variability (vm-HRV) shows promise as a biomarker of internal training load (ITL) during exergame-based training or motor-cognitive training in general. This study evaluated the test-retest reliability of vm-HRV during exergaming in healthy older adults (HOA) and its validity to monitor ITL.

Methods: A within-subjects (repeated-measures) randomized study was conducted that included baseline assessments and 4 measurement sessions.

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Background: Coping with residual cognitive and gait impairments is a prominent unmet need in community-dwelling chronic stroke survivors. Motor-cognitive exergames may be promising to address this unmet need. However, many studies have so far implemented motor-cognitive exergame interventions in an unstructured manner and suitable application protocols remain yet unclear.

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Components of effective exergame-based training to improve cognitive functioning in middle-aged to older adults - A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Ageing Res Rev

August 2024

Motor Control and Learning Group - Institute of Human Movement Sciences and Sport, Department of Health Sciences and Technology, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Department of Health, OST - Eastern Swiss University of Applied Sciences, St. Gallen, Switzerland; Division of Physiotherapy, Department

Background: Exergame-based training is currently considered a more promising training approach than conventional physical and/or cognitive training.

Objectives: This study aimed to provide quantitative evidence on dose-response relationships of specific exercise and training variables (training components) of exergame-based training on cognitive functioning in middle-aged to older adults (MOA).

Methods: We conducted a systematic review with meta-analysis including randomized controlled trials comparing the effects of exergame-based training to inactive control interventions on cognitive performance in MOA.

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Background: Enhancing slow waves, the electrophysiological (EEG) manifestation of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, could potentially benefit patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) by improving sleep quality and slowing disease progression. Phase-targeted auditory stimulation (PTAS) is an approach to enhance slow waves, which are detected in real-time in the surface EEG signal.

Objective: We aimed to test whether the local-field potential of the subthalamic nucleus (STN-LFP) can be used to detect frontal slow waves and assess the electrophysiological changes related to PTAS.

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"Brain-IT": Exergame training with biofeedback breathing in neurocognitive disorders.

Alzheimers Dement

July 2024

Motor Control and Learning Group, Institute of Human Movement Sciences and Sport, Department of Health Sciences and Technology, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

Introduction: The combination of exergame-based motor-cognitive training with resonance breathing guided by heart-rate variability biofeedback (HRV-BF) targets various relevant mechanisms of action to alleviate the pathological state in mild neurocognitive disorders (mNCD).

Methods: This randomized controlled trial (RCT) investigated the effectiveness of adding this novel intervention approach to usual care in mNCD. The individualized intervention was delivered via the "Brain-IT" training concept, which was iteratively co-designed, tested, and refined with patient and public involvement.

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Activation of feedforward wiring in adult hippocampal neurons by the basic-helix-loop-helix transcription factor Ascl4.

PNAS Nexus

May 2024

Laboratory of Neural Connectivity, Brain Research Institute, Faculties of Medicine and Science, University of Zürich, Zürich 8057, Switzerland.

Although evidence indicates that the adult brain retains a considerable capacity for circuit formation, adult wiring has not been broadly considered and remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigate wiring activation in adult neurons. We show that the basic-helix-loop-helix transcription factor Ascl4 can induce wiring in different types of hippocampal neurons of adult mice.

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Objectives: We have previously shown that lactate is an essential metabolite for macrophage polarisation during ischemia-induced muscle regeneration. Recent in vitro work has implicated histone lactylation, a direct derivative of lactate, in macrophage polarisation. Here, we explore the in vivo relevance of histone lactylation for macrophage polarisation after muscle injury.

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The IntelliCage (IC) permits the assessment of the behavior and learning abilities of mice in a social home cage context. To overcome water deprivation as an aversive driver of learning, we developed protocols in which spatial learning is motivated appetitively by the preference of mice for sweetened over plain water. While plain water is available at all times, only correct task responses give access to sweetened water rewards.

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Article Synopsis
  • Physical activity is essential for older adults to prevent physical and cognitive decline, and home-based exergames could help increase activity levels.
  • The systematic review aims to analyze existing studies on exergame interventions for older adults, focusing on their effects on cognitive and physical functions.
  • The results will provide insights into effective exergame programs and guide future developments in digital rehabilitation for the elderly.
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Healthy women show more experimentally induced central sensitization compared with men.

Pain

June 2024

Integrative Spinal Research, Department of Chiropractic Medicine, Balgrist University Hospital, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

Women more often experience chronic pain conditions than men. Central sensitization (CS) is one key mechanism in chronic pain that can differ between the sexes. It is unknown whether CS processes are already more pronounced in healthy women than in men.

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Introduction: Team sports athletes need excellent perceptual-cognitive skills, particularly executive functions (EF) to strategically perform on the field. The transfer effect of cognitive training might be accomplished by the inclusion of cognitive stimuli into a physically active environment as these couplings are required in real game situations. A training approach that combines both components is exergaming.

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Background: Telerehabilitation has gained significance as a tool to deliver and supervise therapy and training as effective as traditional rehabilitation methods yet more accessible and affordable. An exergame-based telerehabilitation system has recently been developed within the scope of the international Continuum-of-Care (COCARE) project. The system comprises training devices for use in clinics (Dividat Senso) and at home (Dividat Senso Flex), an assessment system, and a rehabilitation cockpit, and its focus lies on home-based motor-cognitive training, which is remotely managed by health care professionals (HPs).

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The IntelliCage allows automated testing of cognitive abilities of mice in a social home cage environment without handling by human experimenters. Restricted water access in combination with protocols in which only correct responses give access to water is a reliable learning motivator for hippocampus-dependent tasks assessing spatial memory and executive function. However, water restriction may negatively impact on animal welfare, especially in poor learners.

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Article Synopsis
  • Proteostasis, or protein homeostasis, is thought to be crucial for managing the buildup of harmful proteins like amyloid beta (Aβ) in age-related neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's.
  • Researchers tested this idea using a mouse model with a mutation (Rps9 D95N) that leads to an unstable protein environment, but surprisingly, this disruption did not affect Aβ buildup or Tau phosphorylation levels.
  • The study suggests that even in a misfolding-prone environment, protein homeostasis might not significantly influence the accumulation of pathogenic Aβ or related neuropathology in Alzheimer's disease.
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Background: Exergame-based motor-cognitive training in older adults has been associated with improvements in physical, cognitive, and psychological functioning. The novel Cocare system (Dividat GmbH), developed through a user-centered design process, allows motor-cognitive training in a telerehabilitation setting. It includes (1) a stationary stepping platform for supervised exergame training (Dividat Senso; Dividat GmbH), (2) a home-based version (Dividat Senso Flex, which is a rollable pressure-sensitive mat; Dividat GmbH), (3) an assessment system (including motor-cognitive tests), and (4) a rehabilitation cockpit for remote training supervision and management.

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BackWards - Unveiling the brain's topographic organization of paraspinal sensory input.

Neuroimage

December 2023

Integrative Spinal Research, Department of Chiropractic Medicine, Balgrist University Hospital, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Neuroscience Center Zurich (ZNZ), Zurich, Switzerland.

Article Synopsis
  • Researchers are investigating how the brain reorganizes itself in response to musculoskeletal disorders like chronic low back pain (CLBP), but detailed maps of back sensory representation are still needed.
  • A new technique using pneumatic vibrotactile stimulation was employed to examine sensory input along the thoracolumbar region in 41 healthy participants through fMRI scans.
  • The study found that brain activity patterns corresponding to these sensory inputs are organized in a "dermatomal" way, laying the groundwork for further research on how sensory maps might change in individuals with CLBP.
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Background: Exergames provide a promising new approach to implement simultaneous motor-cognitive training, which may support preventing the decline in cognitive functioning in older adults who have a mild neurocognitive disorder (mNCD).

Objectives: To evaluate feasibility, system usability, and acceptance of "Brain-IT", a newly developed training concept combining exergame-based motor-cognitive training and heart rate variability (HRV) guided resonance breathing for the secondary prevention of mNCD.

Methods: A pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) with an allocation ratio of 2:1 (i.

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Both respiratory muscle endurance training (RMET) and inspiratory resistive training (IMT) seem to increase whole-body exercise performance, but direct comparisons between the two are scarce. We hypothesized that the similarity of RMET to exercise-induced ventilation would induce larger improvements compared to IMT. Twenty-six moderately-trained men performed either 4 weeks of RMET, IMT or SHAM training.

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Introduction: It is suggested that eye movement recordings could be used as an objective evaluation method of motor imagery (MI) engagement. Our investigation aimed to evaluate MI engagement in patients after stroke (PaS) compared with physical execution (PE) of a clinically relevant unilateral upper limb movement task of the patients' affected body side.

Methods: In total, 21 PaS fulfilled the MI ability evaluation [Kinaesthetic and Visual Imagery Questionnaire (KVIQ-10), body rotation task (BRT), and mental chronometry task (MC)].

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Long-term, intense endurance exercise training can occasionally induce endothelial micro-damage and cardiac fibrosis. The underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. Twenty healthy, well-trained male participants (10 runners and 10 cyclists) performed a strenuous high-intensity interval training (HIIT) session matched by age, height, weight and maximal oxygen consumption.

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Background: Face masks protrude into the lower visual field causing reduced perception of visual stimuli, potentially making obstacle avoidance during walking more difficult and increasing fall risk. Recommendations on walking and mask wearing for older adults have been debated, with no clear consensus on the various factors interacting and influencing walking safety while wearing a face mask. It is particularly important to address this issue in populations at an increased risk of falls.

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