Influence of Physical Exercise on Traumatic Brain Injury Deficits: Scaffolding Effect

被引:51
作者
Archer, Trevor [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Gothenburg, Dept Psychol, S-43050 Gothenburg, Sweden
[2] Linnaeus Univ, Sch Educ Psychol & Sport Sci, Kalmar, Sweden
关键词
TBI; Pathophysiology; Exercise; Stress affect; HPA; Cognition; Vascular integrity; Neuroplasticity; Adaptation; Scaffolding; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; IMPROVING COGNITIVE FUNCTION; ANTERIOR-PITUITARY FUNCTION; CRITICAL CLOSING PRESSURE; NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR; WORKING-MEMORY; MAJOR DEPRESSION; CELL-DEATH; MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION; RESISTANCE EXERCISE;
D O I
10.1007/s12640-011-9297-0
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) may be due to a bump, blow, or jolt to the head or a penetrating head injury that disrupts normal brain function; it presents an ever-growing, serious public health problem that causes a considerable number of fatalities and cases of permanent disability annually. Physical exercise restores the healthy homeostatic regulation of stress, affect and the regulation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Physical activity attenuates or reverses the performance deficits observed in neurocognitive tasks. It induces anti-apoptotic effects and buttresses blood-brain barrier intactness. Exercise offers a unique non-pharmacologic, non-invasive intervention that incorporates different regimes, whether dynamic or static, endurance, or resistance. Exercise intervention protects against vascular risk factors that include hypertension, diabetes, cellular inflammation, and aortic rigidity. It induces direct changes in cerebrovasculature that produce beneficial changes in cerebral blood flow, angiogenesis and vascular disease improvement. The improvements induced by physical exercise regimes in brain plasticity and neurocognitive performance are evident both in healthy individuals and in those afflicted by TBI. The overlap and inter-relations between TBI effects on brain and cognition as related to physical exercise and cognition may provide lasting therapeutic benefits for recovery from TBI. It seems likely that some modification of the notion of scaffolding would postulate that physical exercise reinforces the adaptive processes of the brain that has undergone TBI thereby facilitating the development of existing networks, albeit possibly less efficient, that compensate for those lost through damage.
引用
收藏
页码:418 / 434
页数:17
相关论文
共 233 条
[11]   Staging Perspectives in Neurodevelopmental Aspects of Neuropsychiatry: Agents, Phases and Ages at Expression [J].
Archer, Trevor ;
Kostrzewa, Richard M. ;
Beninger, Richard J. ;
Palomo, Tomas .
NEUROTOXICITY RESEARCH, 2010, 18 (3-4) :287-305
[12]   Physical Exercise Attenuates MPTP-Induced Deficits in Mice [J].
Archer, Trevor ;
Fredriksson, Anders .
NEUROTOXICITY RESEARCH, 2010, 18 (3-4) :313-327
[13]   Impaired mitochondrial function, oxidative stress and altered antioxidant enzyme activities following traumatic spinal cord injury [J].
Azbill, RD ;
Mu, XJ ;
BruceKeller, AJ ;
Mattson, MP ;
Springer, JE .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1997, 765 (02) :283-290
[14]   Molecular and Physiological Responses to Juvenile Traumatic Brain Injury: Focus on Growth and Metabolism [J].
Babikian, Talin ;
Prins, Mayumi L. ;
Cai, Yan ;
Barkhoudarian, Garni ;
Hartonian, Ivet ;
Hovda, David A. ;
Giza, Christopher C. .
DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2010, 32 (5-6) :431-441
[15]   Bench to bedside: Evidence for brain injury after concussion - Looking beyond the computed tomography scan [J].
Bazarian, JJ ;
Blyth, B ;
Cimpello, L .
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2006, 13 (02) :199-214
[16]   Effect of exercise training on chronic inflammation [J].
Beavers, Kristen M. ;
Brinkley, Tina E. ;
Nicklas, Barbara J. .
CLINICA CHIMICA ACTA, 2010, 411 (11-12) :785-793
[17]   Brain injury and hypopituitarism: The historical background [J].
Benvenga S. .
Pituitary, 2005, 8 (3-4) :193-195
[18]   EXERCISE AND TIME-DEPENDENT BENEFITS TO LEARNING AND MEMORY [J].
Berchtold, N. C. ;
Castello, N. ;
Cotman, C. W. .
NEUROSCIENCE, 2010, 167 (03) :588-597
[19]   Effects of exercise training on older patients with major depression [J].
Blumenthal, JA ;
Babyak, MA ;
Moore, KA ;
Craighead, E ;
Herman, S ;
Khatri, P ;
Waugh, R ;
Napolitano, MA ;
Forman, LM ;
Appelbaum, M ;
Doraiswamy, PM ;
Krishnan, KR .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 1999, 159 (19) :2349-2356
[20]   Exercise and pharmacotherapy in the treatment of major depressive disorder [J].
Blumenthal, James A. ;
Babyak, Michael A. ;
Doraiswamy, P. Murali ;
Watkins, Lana ;
Hoffman, Benson M. ;
Barbour, Krista A. ;
Herman, Steve ;
Craighead, W. Edward ;
Brosse, Alisha L. ;
Waugh, Robert ;
Hinderliter, Alan ;
Sherwood, Andrew .
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 2007, 69 (07) :587-596