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High spatial overlap but diverging age-related trajectories of cortical magnetic resonance imaging markers aiming to represent intracortical myelin and microstructure

Authors :
Parent, Olivier
Olafson, Emily
Bussy, Aurélie
Tullo, Stephanie
Blostein, Nadia
Dai, Alyssa
Salaciak, Alyssa
Bedford, Saashi A.
Farzin, Sarah
Béland, Marie-Lise
Valiquette, Vanessa
Tardif, Christine L.
Devenyi, Gabriel A.
Chakravarty, M. Mallar
Parent, Olivier
Olafson, Emily
Bussy, Aurélie
Tullo, Stephanie
Blostein, Nadia
Dai, Alyssa
Salaciak, Alyssa
Bedford, Saashi A.
Farzin, Sarah
Béland, Marie-Lise
Valiquette, Vanessa
Tardif, Christine L.
Devenyi, Gabriel A.
Chakravarty, M. Mallar
Source :
PolyPublie
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Statistical effects of cortical metrics derived from standard T1- and T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images, such as gray–white matter contrast (GWC), boundary sharpness coefficient (BSC), T1-weighted/T2-weighted ratio (T1w/T2w), and cortical thickness (CT), are often interpreted as representing or being influenced by intracortical myelin content with little empirical evidence to justify these interpretations. We first examined spatial correspondence with more biologically specific microstructural measures, and second compared between-marker age-related trends with the underlying hypothesis that different measures primarily driven by similar changes in myelo- and microstructural underpinnings should be highly related. Cortical MRI markers were derived from MRI images of 127 healthy subjects, aged 18–81, using cortical surfaces that were generated with the CIVET 2.1.0 pipeline. Their gross spatial distributions were compared with gene expression-derived cell-type densities, histology-derived cytoarchitecture, and quantitative R1 maps acquired on a subset of participants. We then compared between-marker age-related trends in their shape, direction, and spatial distribution of the linear age effect. The gross anatomical distributions of cortical MRI markers were, in general, more related to myelin and glial cells than neuronal indicators. Comparing MRI markers, our results revealed generally high overlap in spatial distribution (i.e., group means), but mostly divergent age trajectories in the shape, direction, and spatial distribution of the linear age effect. We conclude that the microstructural properties at the source of spatial distributions of MRI cortical markers can be different from microstructural changes that affect these markers in aging.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PolyPublie
Notes :
PolyPublie
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1429912528
Document Type :
Electronic Resource