Lifetime walking and Alzheimer's pathology: A longitudinal study in older adults

Elsevier, Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease, Volume 12, 1 August 2025
Authors: 
J., Kim, Jee-wook, M., Keum, Musung, M., Byun, Min-soo, D., Yi, Dahyun, S., Jeon, Soyeon, J., Jung, Joon-hyung et al.

IMPORTANCE: While many studies have shown that greater amounts or longer durations of walking are associated with a lower risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD) or cognitive decline in older adults, the neuropathological basis for this is not yet fully understood. OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between walking intensity and duration and longitudinal changes in Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related brain pathologies, including Aβ and tau accumulation, neurodegeneration, and white matter hyperintensity (WMH). DESIGN: Data were drawn from the Korean Brain Aging Study for the Early Diagnosis and Prediction of AD, a longitudinal cohort study (initiated in 2014). SETTING: Community and memory clinic setting. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred fifty-one older adults. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES: Participants underwent baseline and 4-year follow-up neuroimaging assessments. Lifetime walking, as measured using the Lifetime Total Physical Activity Questionnaire, was categorized by intensity (high vs. low) and duration (short ≤360 min/week vs. long >360 min/week), forming four combined walking groups. Aβ and tau deposition, neurodegeneration, and WMH volume were assessed via PET/MRI. RESULTS: Long-duration or high-intensity walking was associated with significantly reduced Aβ accumulation over 4 years. The high-combined walking group showed similar benefits, while medium-combined groups did not. The effect was significant only in the early life-initiated walking subgroup. No associations were found with tau, neurodegeneration, or WMH volume. CONCLUSIONS: Long-duration, high-intensity walking may reduce brain Aβ accumulation, potentially lowering AD risk, particularly when initiated before late life.