Literature DB >> 28432144

Age-Related Effects and Sex Differences in Gray Matter Density, Volume, Mass, and Cortical Thickness from Childhood to Young Adulthood.

Efstathios D Gennatas1, Brian B Avants2, Daniel H Wolf3, Theodore D Satterthwaite3, Kosha Ruparel3, Rastko Ciric3, Hakon Hakonarson4, Raquel E Gur3, Ruben C Gur3.   

Abstract

Developmental structural neuroimaging studies in humans have long described decreases in gray matter volume (GMV) and cortical thickness (CT) during adolescence. Gray matter density (GMD), a measure often assumed to be highly related to volume, has not been systematically investigated in development. We used T1 imaging data collected on the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort to study age-related effects and sex differences in four regional gray matter measures in 1189 youths ranging in age from 8 to 23 years. Custom T1 segmentation and a novel high-resolution gray matter parcellation were used to extract GMD, GMV, gray matter mass (GMM; defined as GMD × GMV), and CT from 1625 brain regions. Nonlinear models revealed that each modality exhibits unique age-related effects and sex differences. While GMV and CT generally decrease with age, GMD increases and shows the strongest age-related effects, while GMM shows a slight decline overall. Females have lower GMV but higher GMD than males throughout the brain. Our findings suggest that GMD is a prime phenotype for the assessment of brain development and likely cognition and that periadolescent gray matter loss may be less pronounced than previously thought. This work highlights the need for combined quantitative histological MRI studies.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This study demonstrates that different MRI-derived gray matter measures show distinct age and sex effects and should not be considered equivalent but complementary. It is shown for the first time that gray matter density increases from childhood to young adulthood, in contrast with gray matter volume and cortical thickness, and that females, who are known to have lower gray matter volume than males, have higher density throughout the brain. A custom preprocessing pipeline and a novel high-resolution parcellation were created to analyze brain scans of 1189 youths collected as part of the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort. A clear understanding of normal structural brain development is essential for the examination of brain-behavior relationships, the study of brain disease, and, ultimately, clinical applications of neuroimaging.
Copyright © 2017 the authors 0270-6474/17/375065-09$15.00/0.

Entities:  

Keywords:  MRI; T1-weighted imaging; brain structure; cortical thickness; gray matter density; gray matter volume

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28432144      PMCID: PMC5444192          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3550-16.2017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  34 in total

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Review 4.  Gray matter alterations in schizophrenia high-risk youth and early-onset schizophrenia: a review of structural MRI findings.

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Review 5.  Sex differences in brain and behavior in adolescence: Findings from the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort.

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Review 9.  Neuroanatomical Differences Among Sexual Offenders: A Targeted Review with Limitations and Implications for Future Directions.

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10.  A preliminary examination of brain morphometry in youth with Down syndrome with and without parent-reported sleep difficulties.

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