4.6 Article

Dose-response effects of acute exercise intensity on state anxiety among women with depression

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1090077

Keywords

anxiety; depression; aerobic exercise; comorbid; moderate intensity

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Anxiety is common in people with major depressive disorder (MDD), but the effects of acute exercise on anxiety in MDD are not known. This study aimed to determine the optimal acute exercise intensity for reducing state anxiety in women with MDD and the duration of the anxiety reduction. The results showed that prescribed moderate intensity exercise significantly reduced state anxiety in women with MDD for at least 30 minutes after exercise.
Anxiety is common in people with major depressive disorder (MDD), yet the anxiolytic effects of acute exercise in MDD are unknown. The purpose of this analysis was to determine a potentially optimal acute exercise intensity for reducing state anxiety in women with MDD, the duration of the response, and the potential influences of depression severity and preferred-intensity exercise. Using a within-subject, randomized, counter-balanced design, 24 participants completed five separate visits including 20 min of steady-state bicycling at prescribed (via RPE) light, moderate, or hard intensities, a preferred/self-selected session, or a quiet rest (QR) session. State anxiety was measured via the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y1) and anxiety visual analog scale (VAS) at pre-, immediately (VAS only), 10 min, and 30 min post-exercise. Depression was measured via the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) pre-exercise. Moderate exercise resulted in a moderate state anxiety reduction compared to QR 10 min (STAI-Y1: g = 0.59, p(adj) = 0.040) and 30 min post-exercise (STAI-Y1: g = 0.61, p(adj) = 0.032). Pairwise differences indicated each exercise session decreased state anxiety pre to 10 min and 30 min post-exercise (all p(adj) < 0.05) for the STAI-Y1, and for moderate and hard exercise from pre to each time point post-exercise (all p(adj) < 0.05) for the VAS. Depression severity was associated with state anxiety (p < 0.01) but did not influence the overall results. Prescribed moderate intensity exercise led to greater reductions in state anxiety compared to preferred at 30 m (STAI-Y1: g = 0.43, p = 0.04). These findings suggest steady-state prescribed moderate exercise reduces state anxiety in women with MDD for at least 30 min following exercise regardless of their depression severity.

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