| Literature DB >> 25840837 |
Thibo Billiet1, Mathieu Vandenbulcke2, Burkhard Mädler3, Ronald Peeters4, Thijs Dhollander5, Hui Zhang6, Sabine Deprez7, Bea R H Van den Bergh8, Stefan Sunaert7, Louise Emsell9.
Abstract
Age-related microstructural differences have been detected using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Although DTI is sensitive to the effects of aging, it is not specific to any underlying biological mechanism, including demyelination. Combining multiexponential T2 relaxation (MET2) and multishell diffusion MRI (dMRI) techniques may elucidate such processes. Multishell dMRI and MET2 data were acquired from 59 healthy participants aged 17-70 years. Whole-brain and regional age-associated correlations of measures related to multiple dMRI models (DTI, diffusion kurtosis imaging [DKI], neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging [NODDI]) and myelin-sensitive MET2 metrics were assessed. DTI and NODDI revealed widespread increases in isotropic diffusivity with increasing age. In frontal white matter, fractional anisotropy linearly decreased with age, paralleled by increased "neurite" dispersion and no difference in myelin water fraction. DKI measures and neurite density correlated well with myelin water fraction and intracellular and extracellular water fraction. DTI estimates remain among the most sensitive markers for age-related alterations in white matter. NODDI, DKI, and MET2 indicate that the initial decrease in frontal fractional anisotropy may be due to increased axonal dispersion rather than demyelination.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Diffusion MRI; Healthy; Kurtosis; Myelin water imaging; Relaxometry
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25840837 DOI: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2015.02.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurobiol Aging ISSN: 0197-4580 Impact factor: 4.673