| Literature DB >> 25653628 |
Eileen Luders1, Nicolas Cherbuin2, Florian Kurth1.
Abstract
While overall life expectancy has been increasing, the human brain still begins deteriorating after the first two decades of life and continues degrading further with increasing age. Thus, techniques that diminish the negative impact of aging on the brain are desirable. Existing research, although scarce, suggests meditation to be an attractive candidate in the quest for an accessible and inexpensive, efficacious remedy. Here, we examined the link between age and cerebral gray matter re-analyzing a large sample (n = 100) of long-term meditators and control subjects aged between 24 and 77 years. When correlating global and local gray matter with age, we detected negative correlations within both controls and meditators, suggesting a decline over time. However, the slopes of the regression lines were steeper and the correlation coefficients were stronger in controls than in meditators. Moreover, the age-affected brain regions were much more extended in controls than in meditators, with significant group-by-age interactions in numerous clusters throughout the brain. Altogether, these findings seem to suggest less age-related gray matter atrophy in long-term meditation practitioners.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; VBM; aging; brain; gray matter; meditation; mindfulness
Year: 2015 PMID: 25653628 PMCID: PMC4300906 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Negative correlations between global gray matter and age. The X-axis displays the chronological age (in years); the Y-axis displays the global gray matter volume (in ml). Note the less steep slope of the regression line in meditators (yellow) compared to controls (cyan).
Figure 2Negative correlations between local gray matter and age. Displayed are maximum intensity projections superimposed onto the SPM standard glass brain (sagittal, coronal, axial). Shown, in red, are significant negative age-related correlations within controls (top) and meditators (bottom). Significance profiles are corrected for multiple comparisons via controlling the family-wise error (FWE) rate at p ≤ 0.05. Note the less extended clusters in meditators compared to controls.
Figure 3Group-by-age interactions (local gray matter). The results are projected onto sagittal sections of the mean image derived from all subjects (n = 100). The clusters indicate areas where correlations between local gray matter and age are significantly different between meditators and controls (group-by-age interactions). Shown are clusters significant at p ≤ 0.05 with a spatial extent threshold of k ≥ 1039 voxels. Top Row: the different colors encode the T-statistic at the voxel level. Bottom Row: the different colors depict the nine clusters (C1–C9), as detailed in Table 1.
Cluster-specific details for significant group-by-age interactions (local gray matter).
| 20,019 | 67.56 | 3.89 | −42, −84, −17 | Hippocampus/amygdala (L) | |
| Medial (B) lateral (L) occipital cortex | |||||
| Medial (L) lateral (L) parietal cortex | |||||
| Posterior cingulate (L) | |||||
| Central sulcus (L) | |||||
| 8,539 | 28.82 | 3.59 | 60, −4, −12 | Sylvian F. w/operculum + insula (R) | |
| Lateral temporal cortex (R) | |||||
| Inferior parietal cortex (R) | |||||
| Central sulcus (R) | |||||
| 2,986 | 10.08 | 2.99 | 2, 48, −12 | Orbital gyrus (B) | |
| Anterior cingulate gyrus (B) | |||||
| Medial superior frontal gyrus (B) | |||||
| 2,825 | 9.53 | 3.91 | −52, −24, 10 | Sylvian F. w/operculum + insula (L) | |
| Temporo-parietal junction (L) | |||||
| 1,856 | 6.26 | 3.19 | −6, −4, 51 | Mid cingulate gyrus (B) | |
| Medial superior frontal (B) | |||||
| 1,542 | 5.20 | 2.70 | −18, −61, −60 | Cerebellum (B) | |
| 1,368 | 4.62 | 3.25 | 51, −75, −12 | Lateral occipital cortex (R) | |
| 1,360 | 4.59 | 3.47 | 2, −4, −2 | Hypothalamus (B) | |
| Medial thalamus (B) | |||||
| 1,131 | 3.82 | 3.42 | 38, −45, 49 | Lateral parietal cortex (R) | |
L, left hemisphere; R, right hemisphere; B, both hemispheres.