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T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS

BACKGROUND: High intensity interval training (HIIT) has been shown to improve physical and mental health in healthy individuals and those with physical illnesses, such as cardiovascular and cardiometabolic diseases. Initial work has shown that HIIT may have similar benefits in people experiencing me...

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Autores principales: Martland, Rebecca, Stubbs, Brendon, Gaughran, Fiona
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234381/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.707
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author Martland, Rebecca
Stubbs, Brendon
Gaughran, Fiona
author_facet Martland, Rebecca
Stubbs, Brendon
Gaughran, Fiona
author_sort Martland, Rebecca
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: High intensity interval training (HIIT) has been shown to improve physical and mental health in healthy individuals and those with physical illnesses, such as cardiovascular and cardiometabolic diseases. Initial work has shown that HIIT may have similar benefits in people experiencing mental illnesses including schizophrenia. Thus, it has been proposed that HIIT may be a promising exercise intervention that has the potential to target the poor health of those with mental illnesses. Despite the rapid interest in HIIT, there is a lack of clarity in the totality of the evidence for which outcomes and under what regimes HIIT is effective and safe, both in populations with and without mental illnesses. METHODS: A review of the literature was undertaken, comprising a) a meta-review investigating HIIT in all populations and all health outcomes to identify the global health benefits of HIIT; b) a traditional systematic review of all individual interventions of HIIT in all mental disorders (including schizophrenia), to see specifically what has been done in mental health populations. Firstly, major databases were searched for systematic reviews (with/without meta-analyses) of randomised & non-randomised trials that compared HIIT to a control in any human population. Findings were summarised narratively. Secondly, major databases were searched for intervention studies investigating HIIT among people with mental illnesses. Findings were summarised narratively, and a preliminary meta-analysis was undertaken. RESULTS: Regarding our first search, 33 systematic reviews (including 25 meta-analyses) were retrieved encompassing healthy subjects and people with physical health complications. Evidence suggested HIIT improved cardiorespiratory fitness (21/23, 91% systematic reviews), arterial compliance and vascular function (3/5, 60% systematic reviews), cardiac function (2/3, 67%), muscle mass (2/3, 67%), quality of life (2/4, 50%) exercise capacity (2/3, 67%) and inflammatory markers (3/5, 60% reviews), versus control. Improvements in muscular structure, anxiety and depression, and blood pressure were seen, compared to pre-training. Additionally, no acute injuries were reported, and mean adherence rates surpassed 80% in most systematic reviews. Regarding our second search, 12 intervention studies, (including 7 RCTs), were included encompassing Major Depressive Disorder, Schizophrenia-Spectrum Disorders, Bipolar Disorder, Substance Use Disorder, Panic Disorder and ADHD. Evidence suggested HIIT improved cardiorespiratory fitness (5/8 intervention studies, 63%), anthropometric variables (3/4, 75%), mental health outcomes (9/12, 75%), cardiovascular fitness (5/9, 56%), physical fitness (1/1, 100%) and motor skills (1/1, 100%), compare to pre-training. The preliminary meta-analysis of pre-post changes found HIIT increased High-Density-Lipoprotein (SMD:0.373 [95%CI 0.18; 0.57], p=0.0002) and possibly reduced general psychopathology (SMD:-1.58 [95%CI -3.35; 0.18], p=0.08) in people with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. HIIT reduced depression severity (Standardised mean difference (SMD):-1.36 [95%CI-1.63;-1.089], p<0.0001) and possibly improved VO2max (SMD:0.18 [95%CI -0.02; 0.37], p=0.08) in people with depression. No acute injuries were reported, mean adherence to HIIT sessions ranged from 64–94%, and dropout ranged from 0–50%. DISCUSSION: HIIT appears to be associated with multiple benefits in healthy subjects and people with physical health complications. HIIT may also improve a range of physical and mental health outcomes among people with mental illnesses including schizophrenia. Nonetheless, high-quality well-powered trials are needed to reaffirm these findings.
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spelling pubmed-72343812020-05-23 T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS Martland, Rebecca Stubbs, Brendon Gaughran, Fiona Schizophr Bull Poster Session III BACKGROUND: High intensity interval training (HIIT) has been shown to improve physical and mental health in healthy individuals and those with physical illnesses, such as cardiovascular and cardiometabolic diseases. Initial work has shown that HIIT may have similar benefits in people experiencing mental illnesses including schizophrenia. Thus, it has been proposed that HIIT may be a promising exercise intervention that has the potential to target the poor health of those with mental illnesses. Despite the rapid interest in HIIT, there is a lack of clarity in the totality of the evidence for which outcomes and under what regimes HIIT is effective and safe, both in populations with and without mental illnesses. METHODS: A review of the literature was undertaken, comprising a) a meta-review investigating HIIT in all populations and all health outcomes to identify the global health benefits of HIIT; b) a traditional systematic review of all individual interventions of HIIT in all mental disorders (including schizophrenia), to see specifically what has been done in mental health populations. Firstly, major databases were searched for systematic reviews (with/without meta-analyses) of randomised & non-randomised trials that compared HIIT to a control in any human population. Findings were summarised narratively. Secondly, major databases were searched for intervention studies investigating HIIT among people with mental illnesses. Findings were summarised narratively, and a preliminary meta-analysis was undertaken. RESULTS: Regarding our first search, 33 systematic reviews (including 25 meta-analyses) were retrieved encompassing healthy subjects and people with physical health complications. Evidence suggested HIIT improved cardiorespiratory fitness (21/23, 91% systematic reviews), arterial compliance and vascular function (3/5, 60% systematic reviews), cardiac function (2/3, 67%), muscle mass (2/3, 67%), quality of life (2/4, 50%) exercise capacity (2/3, 67%) and inflammatory markers (3/5, 60% reviews), versus control. Improvements in muscular structure, anxiety and depression, and blood pressure were seen, compared to pre-training. Additionally, no acute injuries were reported, and mean adherence rates surpassed 80% in most systematic reviews. Regarding our second search, 12 intervention studies, (including 7 RCTs), were included encompassing Major Depressive Disorder, Schizophrenia-Spectrum Disorders, Bipolar Disorder, Substance Use Disorder, Panic Disorder and ADHD. Evidence suggested HIIT improved cardiorespiratory fitness (5/8 intervention studies, 63%), anthropometric variables (3/4, 75%), mental health outcomes (9/12, 75%), cardiovascular fitness (5/9, 56%), physical fitness (1/1, 100%) and motor skills (1/1, 100%), compare to pre-training. The preliminary meta-analysis of pre-post changes found HIIT increased High-Density-Lipoprotein (SMD:0.373 [95%CI 0.18; 0.57], p=0.0002) and possibly reduced general psychopathology (SMD:-1.58 [95%CI -3.35; 0.18], p=0.08) in people with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. HIIT reduced depression severity (Standardised mean difference (SMD):-1.36 [95%CI-1.63;-1.089], p<0.0001) and possibly improved VO2max (SMD:0.18 [95%CI -0.02; 0.37], p=0.08) in people with depression. No acute injuries were reported, mean adherence to HIIT sessions ranged from 64–94%, and dropout ranged from 0–50%. DISCUSSION: HIIT appears to be associated with multiple benefits in healthy subjects and people with physical health complications. HIIT may also improve a range of physical and mental health outcomes among people with mental illnesses including schizophrenia. Nonetheless, high-quality well-powered trials are needed to reaffirm these findings. Oxford University Press 2020-05 2020-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7234381/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.707 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Poster Session III
Martland, Rebecca
Stubbs, Brendon
Gaughran, Fiona
T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS
title T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS
title_full T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS
title_fullStr T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS
title_full_unstemmed T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS
title_short T147. CAN HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OUTCOMES? A META-REVIEW OF THE GLOBAL BENEFITS OF HIIT AND FOCUSED SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF HIIT IN MENTAL DISORDERS
title_sort t147. can high intensity interval training (hiit) improve physical and mental health outcomes? a meta-review of the global benefits of hiit and focused systematic review of the effects of hiit in mental disorders
topic Poster Session III
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234381/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.707
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