The Therapeutic Potential of Exercise to Improve Mood, Cognition, and Sleep in Parkinson's Disease

Gretchen O Reynolds, Michael W Otto, Terry D Ellis, Alice Cronin-Golomb, Gretchen O Reynolds, Michael W Otto, Terry D Ellis, Alice Cronin-Golomb

Abstract

In addition to the classic motor symptoms, Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with a variety of nonmotor symptoms that significantly reduce quality of life, even in the early stages of the disease. There is an urgent need to develop evidence-based treatments for these symptoms, which include mood disturbances, cognitive dysfunction, and sleep disruption. We focus here on exercise interventions, which have been used to improve mood, cognition, and sleep in healthy older adults and clinical populations, but to date have primarily targeted motor symptoms in PD. We synthesize the existing literature on the benefits of aerobic exercise and strength training on mood, sleep, and cognition as demonstrated in healthy older adults and adults with PD, and suggest that these types of exercise offer a feasible and promising adjunct treatment for mood, cognition, and sleep difficulties in PD. Across stages of the disease, exercise interventions represent a treatment strategy with the unique ability to improve a range of nonmotor symptoms while also alleviating the classic motor symptoms of the disease. Future research in PD should include nonmotor outcomes in exercise trials with the goal of developing evidence-based exercise interventions as a safe, broad-spectrum treatment approach to improve mood, cognition, and sleep for individuals with PD.

Keywords: Parkinson's disease; cognition; exercise; mood; sleep.

Conflict of interest statement

Relevant conflicts of interest/financial disclosures: Nothing to report.

© 2015 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Source: PubMed

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