Mindful Walking Neural Correlates of Executive Function in SC Older Adults at Risk of Dementias

Purpose

Mindful walking is a promising and practical strategy because it combines two activities known to support healthy aging: walking and mindfulness. Unlike many structured exercise programs, mindful walking is low intensity, accessible, and easier to sustain in daily life. It may be especially useful for older adults at elevated risk for ADRD. However, most existing mindful walking studies have focused on mental health outcomes, such as stress reduction, rather than cognitive health. Little is known about whether mindful walking can support cognition or how it may influence brain function. To address this gap and strengthen a future R01 resubmission, the investigators propose a two-arm randomized controlled pilot trial using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), a safe, non-invasive brain imaging method. fNIRS measures brain activity through sensors placed on the scalp and is well-suited for repeated assessments in older adults because it is quiet, portable, painless, and cost-effective. The investigators will recruit racially and ethnically diverse middle-aged and older adults from the Midlands of South Carolina who are at elevated risk for ADRD. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: mindful walking or walking-only control. Both groups will complete 8 staff-supervised individual sessions over 4 weeks. The mindful walking group will learn and practice simple mindfulness skills while walking in multiple settings, including lab-based, indoor, and outdoor environments, to support real-world use. Findings from this pilot study will provide important evidence on whether mindful walking can support brain and cognitive health in adults at elevated risk for ADRD. The results will also help establish a practical, scalable, and sustainable prevention strategy for underserved aging populations in South Carolina.

Condition

  • Older Adults With Elevated Dementia Risk

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 60 Years
Eligible Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  1. Age 60 or older 2. Sedentary (sit ≥9hrs per day) and not meeting the US physical activity guidelines 3. Have at least one of the following ADRD risk factors: i. family history of ADRD (>= first-degree relative) ii. subjective experience of cognitive complaints iii. currently overweight or obese (BMI≥25) 4. Adequate hearing, visual and cognitive ability to complete study tasks and assessments 5. Able to walk without others' assistance 6. Medically stable with or without medication (do not expect to have major health status changes or a surgery in the next 4 months)

Exclusion Criteria

  1. Diagnosis of ADRD or other brain abnormalities (i.e., strokes, epilepsy, Parkinson's disease) 2. Diagnosis of mental disorders (i.e., depression) 3. Inability to complete surveys on mobile device or wear the activity monitor (i.e., due to arthritis, physical limitations, or other reasons) 4. Plan to move or have surgery in next 4 months 5. Currently participate in other study involving physical activity or cognitive training that may interfere with the study outcomes 6. Unable to provide consent due to disabilities

Study Design

Phase
Phase 2
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Prevention
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Mindful walking arm
Older adults will participate in 8 sessions of mindful walking over one month
  • Behavioral: Mindfulness-based walking
    Implementing mindfulness skills during the walking movement
Active Comparator
Walking-only arm
Older adults will participate in 8 sessions of walking over one month
  • Behavioral: Walking-only
    Older adults will participate in 8 sessions of walking over one month without being trained on mindfulness skills.

Recruiting Locations

University of South Carolina
Columbia, South Carolina 29201
Contact:
Chih-Hsiang Yang
8037771025
cy11@mailbox.sc.edu

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
University of South Carolina

Study Contact

Halle Prine, MS
8039997392
HPRINE@email.sc.edu

Detailed Description

The number of older adults living with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) is escalating around the world, yet no effective treatment is currently available. Non-pharmacological early preventive strategies are urgently needed to mitigate the social and economic burden of ADRD and to sustain quality of life in the aging population, including the seniors living in South Carolina (SC). Mindful walking represents a promising prevention approach to sustain cognition, as it simultaneously practices mindfulness skills during physical activity (walking). However, existing mindful walking programs primarily focused on mental health outcomes (e.g., stress reduction) and overlooked the potential efficacy on cognition. This lower-intensity lifestyle physical activity may be a more viable and inclusive prevention strategy with greater scalability and long-term sustainability to serve ADRD at-risk aging populations. Our preliminary work in African American older adults around the Midlands of SC has established preliminary signals that mindful walking is feasible, acceptable, and it may sustain proximal cognitive function. However, the literature to date has not tested the neural-level correlates underlying mindful walking to infer the potential mechanism related to executive function enhancement. This is also a gap raised by a reviewer from our scored R01 in 2023 (not funded, 40th percentile). To address this knowledge gap and strengthen our R01 resubmission, our team proposes to conduct a two-arm randomized controlled pilot trial to determine the neural-level underpinning of mindful walking using the Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). fNIRS offers a non-invasive neuroimaging tool that uses source-detector channels placed on the scalp to measure event-evoked neural activities across the lifespan (e.g., engaged executive function while practicing mindfulness skills). fNIRS is a device that is well-suited for within-subjects repeated data collection in older adults because it is noiseless and compact, painless, and cost-effective, making it suitable to apply in a behavioral trial that requires multiple assessments. This randomized controlled trial will recruit race and ethnically diverse middle-aged and older adults who have elevated risk(s) for ADRD from the Midlands of SC. Participants will be randomly assigned to participate in 8 sessions of individual mindful walking or a walking-only control group supervised by the staff across 4 weeks. The mindful walking group will be instructed to practice simple but fundamental mindfulness skills in multiple settings to facilitate real-world skill translation (in lab, indoor, outdoor). This study will administer lab-based measures of cognitive assessments, including the fNIRS, MoCA, and NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery, to examine group differences in neural activations measured using fNIRS (Aim 1) and the concordance between executive function measured using fNIRS, MoCA, and NIH Toolbox (Aim 2). Findings from this study have the potential to provide a viable and achievable behavioral strategy that can be engaged in daily life to address cognitive health and reduce ADRD risk among underserved older populations in the Midlands of SC. It will also well-position our team to submit R01s in the following years to support this timely and critical research.