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Relationship Between Risk Factors and Brain Reserve in Late Middle Age: Implications for Cognitive Aging.

Authors :
Neth BJ
Graff-Radford J
Mielke MM
Przybelski SA
Lesnick TG
Schwarz CG
Reid RI
Senjem ML
Lowe VJ
Machulda MM
Petersen RC
Jack CR Jr
Knopman DS
Vemuri P
Source :
Frontiers in aging neuroscience [Front Aging Neurosci] 2020 Jan 09; Vol. 11, pp. 355. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Jan 09 (Print Publication: 2019).
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Brain reserve can be defined as the individual variation in the brain structural characteristics that later in life are likely to modulate cognitive performance. Late midlife represents a point in aging where some structural brain imaging changes have become manifest but the effects of cognitive aging are minimal, and thus may represent an ideal opportunity to determine the relationship between risk factors and brain imaging biomarkers of reserve.<br />Objective: We aimed to assess neuroimaging measures from multiple modalities to broaden our understanding of brain reserve, and the late midlife risk factors that may make the brain vulnerable to age related cognitive disorders.<br />Methods: We examined multimodal [structural and diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), FDG PET] neuroimaging measures in 50-65 year olds to examine the associations between risk factors (Intellectual/Physical Activity: education-occupation composite, physical, and cognitive-based activity engagement; General Health Factors: presence of cardiovascular and metabolic conditions (CMC), body mass index, hemoglobin A1c, smoking status (ever/never), CAGE Alcohol Questionnaire (>2, yes/no), Beck Depression Inventory score), brain reserve measures [Dynamic: genu corpus callosum fractional anisotropy (FA), posterior cingulate cortex FDG uptake, superior parietal cortex thickness, AD signature cortical thickness; Static: intracranial volume], and cognition (global, memory, attention, language, visuospatial) from a population-based sample. We quantified dynamic proxies of brain reserve (cortical thickness, glucose metabolism, microstructural integrity) and investigated various protective/risk factors.<br />Results: Education-occupation was associated with cognition and total intracranial volume (static measure of brain reserve), but was not associated with any of the dynamic neuroimaging biomarkers. In contrast, many general health factors were associated with the dynamic neuroimaging proxies of brain reserve, while most were not associated with cognition in this late middle aged group.<br />Conclusion: Brain reserve, as exemplified by the four dynamic neuroimaging features studied here, is itself at least partly influenced by general health status in midlife, but may be largely independent of education and occupation.<br /> (Copyright © 2020 Neth, Graff-Radford, Mielke, Przybelski, Lesnick, Schwarz, Reid, Senjem, Lowe, Machulda, Petersen, Jack, Knopman and Vemuri.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1663-4365
Volume :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Frontiers in aging neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31998113
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2019.00355