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Healthy Aging An Automatic Analysis of Global and Regional Morphological Alterations of Human Brain

Authors :
Long, Xiaojing
Liao, Weiqi
Jiang, Chunxiang
Liang, Dong
Qiu, Bensheng
Zhang, Lijuan
Source :
Academic Radiology. (7):785-793
Publisher :
AUR. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Abstract

Rationale and ObjectivesMorphologic changes of the human brain during healthy aging provide useful reference knowledge for age-related brain disorders. The aim of this study was to explore age-related global and regional morphological changes of healthy adult brains.Materials and MethodsT1-weighted magnetic resonance images covering the entire brain were acquired for 314 subjects. Image processing of registration, segmentation, and surface construction were performed to calculate the volumes of the cerebrum, cerebellum, brain stem, lateral ventricle, and subcortical nuclei, as well as the surface area, mean curvature index, cortical thickness of the cerebral cortex, and subjacent white matter volume using FreeSurfer software. Mean values of each morphologic index were calculated and plotted against age group for sectional analysis. Regression analysis was conducted using SPSS to investigate the age effects on global and regional volumes of human brain.ResultsOverall global and regional volume loss was observed for the entire brain during healthy aging. Moderate atrophy was observed in subcortical gray matter structures, including the thalamus (R2 = 0.476, P < .001), nucleus accumbens (R2 = 0.525, P < .001), pallidum (R2 = 0.461, P < .001), and putamen (R2 = 0.533, P < .001). The volume of hippocampus showed a slight increase by 40 years of age, followed by a relatively faster decline after the age of 50 years (R2 = 0.486, P < .001). Surface area and mean curvature were less affected by aging relative to cortical thickness and subjacent white matter volume. Significant cortical thinning was mainly found in the parietal (R2 = 0.553, P < .001) and insula regions (R2 = 0.405, P < .001).ConclusionsMorphologic alterations of human brain manifested regional heterogeneity in the scenario of general volume loss during healthy aging. The age effect on the hippocampus demonstrated a unique evolution. These findings provide informative reference knowledge that may help in identifying and differentiating pathologic aging and other neurologic disorders.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10766332
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Academic Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....eb2a8c054541e184abe1674b52c30b5b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acra.2012.03.006