| Literature DB >> 26777626 |
J Y Guo1, M Isohanni2, J Miettunen3, E Jääskeläinen2, V Kiviniemi4, J Nikkinen4, J Remes4, S Huhtaniska5, J Veijola2, P B Jones6, G K Murray7.
Abstract
Brain development during childhood and adolescence differs between boys and girls. Structural changes continue during adulthood and old age, particularly in terms of brain volume reductions that accelerate beyond age 35 years. We investigated whether brain structural change in mid-life differs between men and women. 43 men and 28 women from the Northern Finland 1966 Birth Cohort underwent MRI brain scans at age 33-35 (SD=0.67) and then again at age 42-44 (SD=0.41). We examined sex differences in total percentage brain volume change (PBVC) and regional brain change with FSL SIENA software. Women showed significant PBVC reduction compared with men between the ages of 33-35 and 42-44 years (Mean=-3.21% in men, Mean=-4.03% in women, F (1, 68)=6.37, p<0.05). In regional analyses, women exhibited greater brain reduction than men in widespread areas. After controlling for total percent brain volume change, men show greater relative regional brain reduction than women in bilateral precentral gyri, bilateral paracingulate gyri, and bilateral supplementary motor cortices. The results indicate sex differences in brain changes in mid-life. Women have more total brain reduction, and more reduction on the outer brain surface than men, whereas men exhibit more brain reduction on the mid-line surface than women after co-varying for total brain volume loss. These changes could contribute to sex differences in midlife behaviour and health.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Gender difference; Longitudinal MRI; Sex differences; Sexual dimorphism
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26777626 PMCID: PMC4762229 DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2016.01.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosci Lett ISSN: 0304-3940 Impact factor: 3.046
Demographic data.
| Men ( | Women ( | Statistics | Sig. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | S.D. | Mean | S.D. | |||
| Age at baseline (years) | 35.05 | 0.62 | 34.86 | 0.74 | .261 | |
| Age at follow-up (years) | 43.55 | 0.41 | 43.47 | 0.42 | .459 | |
| Follow-up time (years) | 8.50 | 0.63 | 8.61 | 0.72 | .501 | |
| Handedness (right/left) | 40/3 | 26/2 | .979 | |||
| Education | 2/26/15 | 1/19/8 | .818 | |||
| Employment (yes/no) | 38/5 | 23/5 | .461 | |||
Education includes three levels ranging from elementary school (9 years or less), secondary school (10–12 years), or tertiary (over 12 years).
Employment at the time of the base-line scan was coded as a dichotomised variable: full-time work or not. Maternity leave was considered as in employment.
Fig. 1Percentage brain volume change by gender: women showed significantly greater total percentage brain volume loss than men between the ages of 34 to 43 years.
Fig. 2Sex differences in regional brain edge structural changes over time after controlling for total brain loss: women showed greater regional brain reduction compared with men on the edges of the bilateral frontal lobe, bilateral parietal lobe and bilateral occipital pole (shown in yellow and red), and less regional brain reduction than men on the edges of the bilateral precentral gyri, bilateral paracingulate gyri and supplementary motor cortices (shown in blue). (For interpretation of the references to color in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)