| Literature DB >> 29760066 |
Micaela Y Chan1, Jinkyung Na2, Phillip F Agres1, Neil K Savalia1, Denise C Park1,3, Gagan S Wig4,3.
Abstract
An individual's environmental surroundings interact with the development and maturation of their brain. An important aspect of an individual's environment is his or her socioeconomic status (SES), which estimates access to material resources and social prestige. Previous characterizations of the relation between SES and the brain have primarily focused on earlier or later epochs of the lifespan (i.e., childhood, older age). We broaden this work to examine the relationship between SES and the brain across a wide range of human adulthood (20-89 years), including individuals from the less studied middle-age range. SES, defined by education attainment and occupational socioeconomic characteristics, moderates previously reported age-related differences in the brain's functional network organization and whole-brain cortical structure. Across middle age (35-64 years), lower SES is associated with reduced resting-state system segregation (a measure of effective functional network organization). A similar but less robust relationship exists between SES and age with respect to brain anatomy: Lower SES is associated with reduced cortical gray matter thickness in middle age. Conversely, younger and older adulthood do not exhibit consistent SES-related difference in the brain measures. The SES-brain relationships persist after controlling for measures of physical and mental health, cognitive ability, and participant demographics. Critically, an individual's childhood SES cannot account for the relationship between their current SES and functional network organization. These findings provide evidence that SES relates to the brain's functional network organization and anatomy across adult middle age, and that higher SES may be a protective factor against age-related brain decline.Entities:
Keywords: aging; cortical thickness; lifespan; resting-state networks; socioeconomic status
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29760066 PMCID: PMC5984486 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1714021115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.Functional network and structural measures of the brain. (A) Functional network organization was measured using resting-state network analysis. The set of nodes is depicted on a “midthickness” brain surface (Left) and with a spring-embedded graph (Right). The spring-embedded graph depicts the network organization of the mean younger adult (20–34 y) brain network, where nodes in the same functional system are more connected with each other (i.e., closer in distance) than with nodes from other systems. The nodes shown in the figure are colored by younger adults’ functional system assignments. (B) The mean resting-state fMRI time series of each node was extracted to form a node-to-node cross-correlation data matrix. Edges between nodes of the same brain system are within-system connections (shaded), whereas edges between nodes of different systems (e.g., connection from a default system node to a frontal-parietal control system node) are between-system connections (not shaded). For each participant’s resting-state data matrix, system segregation is calculated using the mean within-system and mean between-system connection strength (see for additional details). (C) Cortical gray matter thickness was measured as the distance between the pial (CSF–gray matter boundary; red) and white (gray matter–white matter boundary; blue) surfaces of the brain. (Magnification: 3.87×.) (D) An example of a single participant’s cortical thickness map is shown on a midthickness surface rendering of the right hemisphere.
Demographic information
| Age groups | |||||
| Variable | Younger (20–34 y) | Middle early (35–49 y) | Middle late (50–64 y) | Older (65–89 y) | |
| 44 | 43 | 85 | 132 | NA | |
| % Female | 59% | 63% | 66% | 55% | NS |
| % Minority | 34% | 21% | 12% | 4% | <0.001*** |
| SES (SD) | 0.18 (1.30) | 0.21 (1.21) | −0.11 (1.19) | −0.05 (1.22) | NS |
| Education years (SD) | 16.52 (2.46) | 16.29 (2.26) | 15.65 (2.13) | 15.50 (2.29) | 0.028* |
| Occupational socioeconomic index (SD) | 45.73 (12.96) | 47.44 (13.02) | 45.30 (12.99) | 47.20 (11.79) | NS |
| MMSE (SD) | 28.41 (1.23) | 28.67 (1.13) | 28.39 (1.13) | 28.11 (1.21) | 0.035* |
| BMI | 25.20 (4.82) | 24.99 (3.91) | 26.54 (4.00) | 25.80 (3.64) | NS |
| SF-36 PCS | 56.74 (4.88) | 56.99 (4.10) | 55.38 (6.93) | 53.05 (5.77) | <0.001*** |
| % with chronic physical health issues | 23% | 14% | 20% | 31% | NS |
| % Hypertension | 0% | 2% | 24% | 32% | <0.001*** |
| % Never smoker | 64% | 67% | 73% | 56% | NS |
| Alcohol per week (SD) | 2.88 (3.73) | 2.42 (2.74) | 2.31 (3.84) | 2.77 (3.75) | NS |
| Head motion (mean FD; SD) | 0.12 (0.03) | 0.14 (0.04) | 0.16 (0.06) | 0.18 (0.06) | <0.001*** |
Statistical tests between age groups were conducted with χ2 test for distributions of gender, minority (self-reporting as nonwhite/Caucasian), participants with chronic physical health issues, participants with hypertension, and smoker status; ANOVAs were used for SES, education years, occupational socioeconomic index, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), SF-36 Physical Component Score (PCS), alcohol consumption (drinks per week), and in-scanner head motion during resting state (BOLD fMRI) scan [mean frame displacement (FD)]. Asterisks denote statistical significance (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001); NS, not significant; NA, statistical test was not performed.
Fig. 2.Lower SES adults exhibit reduced segregation of their resting-state functional brain networks and lower mean cortical thickness in middle-age adulthood. For each age group, brain system segregation (A) and mean cortical thickness (B) are plotted for higher and lower SES (stratified using a median split across the entire participant sample; error bars depict standard error of the mean). Higher SES is associated with greater brain system segregation and mean cortical thickness in middle-age groups (ME, 35–49 y; ML, 50–64 y). Primary statistical models were completed using general linear modeling, where SES was modeled continuously (see SES Moderates Age-Related Differences in Functional Network Organization and SES Moderates Differences in Brain Anatomy Across Age Groups for details).
Covariate analysis summary
| SES × age group ( | SES × age group controlling for childhood SES ( | |||||||
| Brain system segregation | Cortical thickness | Brain system segregation | Cortical thickness | |||||
| Covariates | ||||||||
Head motion only | 3.16 | 0.025* | 2.67 | 0.048* | 2.85 | 0.039* | 0.65 | NS |
| Demographic + head motion | 2.47 | 0.062+ | 2.81 | 0.040* | 2.79 | 0.042* | 0.97 | NS |
| Physical health + head motion | 3.11 | 0.027* | 2.26 | 0.082+ | 2.58 | 0.056+ | 0.78 | NS |
| Mental health + head motion | 3.15 | 0.026* | 2.81 | 0.040* | 2.59 | 0.055+ | 1.22 | NS |
Fluid intelligence + head motion | 2.97 | 0.032* | 2.23 | 0.085+ | 2.73 | 0.046* | 0.56 | NS |
Long-term episodic memory + head motion | 3.41 | 0.018* | 2.67 | 0.048* | 2.98 | 0.033* | 0.68 | NS |
Summary of SES by age group interactions on brain system segregation and mean cortical thickness: controlling for multiple sets of covariates (left), controlling for covariates and childhood SES in a subsample of participants who had childhood-SES information available (right). Head motion refers to estimated measures of participants’ in-scanner head motion (mean FD); demographic variables include sex and race; physical health variables include BMI, SF-36 PCS, hypertension, smoker status, alcohol consumption, and chronic health issues; mental health variables include depressive symptoms and life satisfaction; fluid intelligence and episodic memory are factor scores generated from multiple tasks (see ). Asterisks denote statistical significance, *P < 0.05; crosses denote marginal effects, +P < 0.10; NS, not significant.