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Study: Crossword puzzles show greater cognitive improvement than computer video games in older adults

ANI Oct 28, 2022

According to a recent study from Columbia University and Duke University, crossword puzzles are better for memory performance in older people with mild cognitive impairment than in computer video games.


The findings of the study were published in the journal NEJM Evidence. In a randomised, controlled trial, led by D.P. Devanand, MD, professor of psychiatry and neurology at Columbia, with Murali Doraiswamy, MD, professor of psychiatry and medicine at Duke, researchers determined that participants (average age 71) trained in doing web-based crossword puzzles demonstrated greater cognitive improvement than those who were trained on cognitive video games.

"This is the first study to document both short-term and longer-term benefits for home-based crossword puzzles training compared to another intervention," said Dr. Devanand, who oversees brain aging and mental health research at Columbia.

"The results are important in light of difficulty in showing improvement with interventions in mild cognitive impairment."

Crossword puzzles are widely used but have not been studied systematically in mild cognitive impairment, which is associated with a high risk of dementia, including Alzheimer's disease.

To conduct their study, researchers at Columbia and Duke randomly assigned 107 participants with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) at the two different sites to either crossword puzzles training or cognitive games training with intensive training for 12 weeks followed by booster sessions up to 78 weeks. Both interventions were delivered via a computerised platform with weekly compliance monitoring.

The most striking findings of the trial were:

Crossword puzzles were superior to cognitive games on the primary cognitive outcome measure, ADAS-Cog, at both 12 weeks and 78 weeks. Crossword puzzles were superior on the FAQ, a measure of daily functioning, at 78 weeks.

Crossword puzzles were superior for participants at a later disease stage, but both forms of training were equally effective in an earlier stage.

Brain shrinkage (measured with MRI) was less for crossword puzzles in 78 weeks. "The benefits were seen not only in cognition but also in daily activities with indications of brain shrinkage on MRI that suggests that the effects are clinically meaningful," Dr. Devanand said.

The study also highlights the importance of engagement. Based on remote electronic monitoring of computer use, participants at a later stage of impairment may have better engaged with the more familiar crossword puzzles than with computerised cognitive games.

Two strengths of the trial are the 28 per cent participation rate of individuals from racial and ethnic minority groups and the low drop-out rate (15 per cent) for such a lengthy home-based trial. A study limitation was the absence of a control group that did not receive cognitive training.

While these results are highly encouraging, the authors stress the need for replication in a larger controlled trial with an inactive control group.

"The trifecta of improving cognition, function, and neuroprotection is the Holy Grail for the field," said Dr. Doraiswamy. "Further research to scale brain training as a home-based digital therapeutic for delaying Alzheimer's should be a priority for the field."

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