Literature DB >> 26983072

A Cross-Sectional Voxel-Based Morphometric Study of Age- and Sex-Related Changes in Gray Matter Volume in the Normal Aging Brain.

Fei Peng1, Lixin Wang, Zuojun Geng, Qingfeng Zhu, Zhenhu Song.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to carry out a cross-sectional study of 124 cognitively normal Chinese adults using the voxel-based morphometry approach to delineate age-related changes in the gray matter volume of regions of interest (ROI) in the brain and further analyze their correlation with age.
METHODS: One hundred twenty-four cognitively normal adults were divided into the young age group, the middle age group, and the old age group. Conventional magnetic resonance imaging was performed with the Achieva 3.0 T system. Structural images were processed using VBM8 and SPM8. Regions of interest were obtained by WFU PickAtlas and all realigned images were spatially normalized.
RESULTS: Females showed significantly greater total gray matter volume than males (t = 4.81, P = 0.0000, false discovery rate corrected). Compared with young subjects, old-aged subjects showed extensive reduction in gray matter volumes in all ROIs examined except the occipital lobe. In young- and middle-aged subjects, female and male subjects showed significant difference in the right middle temporal gyrus, right superior temporal gyrus, left angular gyrus, right middle occipital lobe, left middle cingulate gyrus, and the pars triangularis of the right inferior frontal gyrus, suggesting an interaction between age and sex (P < 0.001, uncorrected). Logistic regression analysis revealed linear negative correlation between the total gray matter volume and age (R = 0.529, P < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Significant age-related differences are present in gray matter volume across multiple brain regions during aging. The VPM approach may provide an emerging paradigm in the normal aging brain that may help differentiate underlying normal neurobiological aging changes of specific brain regions from neurodegenerative impairments.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26983072     DOI: 10.1097/RCT.0000000000000351

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comput Assist Tomogr        ISSN: 0363-8715            Impact factor:   1.826


  4 in total

1.  Global Cerebral Atrophy Detected by Routine Imaging: Relationship with Age, Hippocampal Atrophy, and White Matter Hyperintensities.

Authors:  Omar M Al-Janabi; Pradeep Panuganti; Erin L Abner; Ahmed A Bahrani; Ronan Murphy; Shoshana H Bardach; Allison Caban-Holt; Peter T Nelson; Brian T Gold; Charles D Smith; Donna M Wilcock; Gregory A Jicha
Journal:  J Neuroimaging       Date:  2018-01-05       Impact factor: 2.486

2.  Pattern recognition of magnetic resonance imaging-based gray matter volume measurements classifies bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder.

Authors:  Harry Rubin-Falcone; Francesca Zanderigo; Binod Thapa-Chhetry; Martin Lan; Jeffrey M Miller; M Elizabeth Sublette; Maria A Oquendo; David J Hellerstein; Patrick J McGrath; Johnathan W Stewart; J John Mann
Journal:  J Affect Disord       Date:  2017-11-13       Impact factor: 4.839

3.  Visual and Auditory fMRI Paradigms for Presurgical Language Mapping: Convergent Validity and Relationship to Individual Variables.

Authors:  Antonina Omisade; Christopher B O'Grady; Matthias H Schmidt; John D Fisk
Journal:  Neurol Res Int       Date:  2019-04-01

4.  Quantitative evaluation of brain volume among elderly individuals in São Paulo, Brazil: a population-based study.

Authors:  Mariana Athaniel Silva Rodrigues; Thiago Pereira Rodrigues; Mayana Zatz; Maria Lúcia Lebrão; Yeda Aparecida Duarte; Michel Satya Naslavsky; Felipe Barjud Pereira do Nascimento; Edson Amaro Junior
Journal:  Radiol Bras       Date:  2019 Sep-Oct
  4 in total

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