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Brain aging comprises many modes of structural and functional change with distinct genetic and biophysical associations.

Authors :
Smith SM
Elliott LT
Alfaro-Almagro F
McCarthy P
Nichols TE
Douaud G
Miller KL
Source :
ELife [Elife] 2020 Mar 05; Vol. 9. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Mar 05.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Brain imaging can be used to study how individuals' brains are aging, compared against population norms. This can inform on aspects of brain health; for example, smoking and blood pressure can be seen to accelerate brain aging. Typically, a single 'brain age' is estimated per subject, whereas here we identified 62 modes of subject variability, from 21,407 subjects' multimodal brain imaging data in UK Biobank. The modes represent different aspects of brain aging, showing distinct patterns of functional and structural brain change, and distinct patterns of association with genetics, lifestyle, cognition, physical measures and disease. While conventional brain-age modelling found no genetic associations, 34 modes had genetic associations. We suggest that it is important not to treat brain aging as a single homogeneous process, and that modelling of distinct patterns of structural and functional change will reveal more biologically meaningful markers of brain aging in health and disease.<br />Competing Interests: SS, LE, FA, PM, TN, GD, KM No competing interests declared<br /> (© 2020, Smith et al.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050-084X
Volume :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ELife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32134384
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.52677