| Literature DB >> 31398858 |
Farzaneh A Sorond1, Philip B Gorelick2.
Abstract
Age-related brain white matter disease is a form of small vessel disease (SVD) that may be associated with lacunar and other small subcortical infarcts, cerebral microbleeds, and perivascular spaces. This common form of cerebrovascular disease may manifest clinically as cognitive impairment of varying degrees and difficulty with mobility. Whereas some persons show cognitive decline and mobility failure when there are brain white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and acute stroke, others recover, and not everyone with brain white matter disease is disabled. Thus, repair or compensation of brain white matter may be possible, and furthermore, certain vascular risks, such as raised blood pressure, are targets for prevention of white matter disease or are administered to reduce the burden of such disease. Vascular risk modification may be useful, but alone may not be sufficient to prevent white matter disease progression. In this chapter, we specifically focus on WMH of vascular origin and explore white matter development, plasticity, and enduring processes of myelination across the health span in the context of experimental and human data, and compare and contrast resilient brain white matter propensity to a diseased white matter state. We conclude with thoughts on novel ways one might study white matter resilience, and predict future healthy cognitive and functional outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive myelination; aging; brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); cognition; gait; oligodendrocyte progenitor cells; oligodendrocytes; small vessel disease; white matter
Year: 2019 PMID: 31398858 PMCID: PMC6721396 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci9080193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1(A) Non-contrast brain computed tomography with leukoaraiosis. (B) FLAIR MRI sequences with increasing severity of deep and periventricular white matter hyperintensities.
Studies in Activity Dependent Myelination.
| InIntervention | Finding | Study |
|---|---|---|
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| Social isolation: 4 weeks of isolation in juvenile mice | Deficits in social interaction task not rescued by social re-introduction | [ |
| Complex wheel task in adult mice | Additional OPCs and mature oligodendrocytes in the corpus callosum. Generation of new oligodendrocytes required skill improvement | [ |
| Rats trained in single-pallet reaching task | Increase FA in Cingulum and external capsule | [ |
| Optical stimulation of the pre-motor cortex in mice | Proliferation of OPCs in the deep cortex and subcortical white matter within the stimulated circuit. Activity induced expansion of the oligodendrocyte lineage | [ |
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| Juggling training in adults | Increased FA | [ |
| Musical training | Increased FA | [ |
| Learning a second language | Increased FA | [ |
| Extensive piano practicing | Enhanced white matter development | [ |
| finger-thumb opposition sequence task (10 min daily, over 4 weeks) | Increased FA | [ |
| Visuomotor skill training | Increased myelination only in ROIs contralateral to trained limb, correlated with skill acquisition (Increased myelin water fraction [MWF]) | [ |
| Exercise (Physical fitness or Activity: PFA) | Increased PFA with improved WM structure, but effect size small | [ |
| Memory Training | Those with higher MD had the least improvement | [ |
| Cardiorespiratory fitness (exercise training) | Cardiorespiratory fitness (exercise training) | [ |
mPFC: medial Prefrontal Cortex; OPCs: Oligodendrocyte Progenitor Cells; FA: Fractional Anisotropy; ROIs: Regions of Interest; MD: Mean Diffusivity.