Linking Individual Variability of Multi-modal Connectivity, Lifestyle, Psycho-Social Factors and Cognition in Older Adults.

IF 6.9 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Mingxian Zhang, Susanne Moebus, Nico Dragano, Nora Bittner, Svenja Caspers
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Abstract

Older adults exhibit greater heterogeneity than younger adults in behavior, cognition, and brain, which may be influenced by a range of factors, including lifestyle. While previous studies have assessed brain heterogeneity by evaluating the dissimilarity of individual brain connectivity, further empirical evidence is needed to understand the factors behind brain heterogeneity in older adults. Using data from the 1000BRAINS study (N = 461, aged 55-85 years), we analyzed the individual variability (IV) of the functional (IVFC) and structural (IVSC) connectivity across 421 brain regions. We aimed to explore the relationship between network-wise and region-wise brain connectivity IV (i.e., both IVFC and IVSC), lifestyle, including psycho-social factors (e.g., self-reported smoking, physical activity, alcohol consumption, and social integration), and cognitive function via partial least squares correlation, stratifying analyses by age subgroups (55-64, 65-74, and ≥ 75 years), separately. Our results showed that higher connectivity IV was linked to lower social integration and/or higher smoking, and lower cognitive performance (e.g., episodic memory and executive control). For the network-wise analysis, we observed contributions from both IVFC and IVSC across eight networks, especially IVSC in the salience and ventral attention networks. Region-wise, significant contributions came primarily from the connectivity IV of specific brain regions (e.g., inferior frontal gyrus, right anterior cingulate cortex). This result pattern varied by age group. Connectivity IV was positively correlated with smoking in the age 65-74 group and negatively correlated with alcohol consumption in the age ≥ 75 years group. Overall, IVSC contributed more than IVFC with age. These findings suggest that unhealthy lifestyle and social isolation might be associated with differences in neural resources, which may be linked to increased individual brain heterogeneity and, in turn, to lower cognitive performance in older adults, supporting the revised Scaffolding Theory of Aging and Cognition (STAC-r).

老年人多模态连通性、生活方式、社会心理因素和认知的个体差异。
老年人在行为、认知和大脑方面比年轻人表现出更大的异质性,这可能受到包括生活方式在内的一系列因素的影响。虽然以前的研究通过评估个体大脑连接的差异性来评估大脑异质性,但需要进一步的经验证据来了解老年人大脑异质性背后的因素。使用来自1000BRAINS研究的数据(N = 461,年龄55-85岁),我们分析了421个大脑区域的功能(IVFC)和结构(IVSC)连接的个体差异(IV)。我们的目的是通过偏最小二乘相关,分别按年龄亚组(55-64岁、65-74岁和≥75岁)进行分层分析,探索网络和区域脑连通性IV(即IVFC和IVSC)、生活方式(包括心理社会因素(例如,自我报告吸烟、体育活动、饮酒和社会融合)和认知功能之间的关系。我们的研究结果表明,更高的连通性IV与较低的社会整合和/或较高的吸烟率以及较低的认知表现(例如情景记忆和执行控制)有关。对于网络方面的分析,我们观察到IVFC和IVSC在8个网络中的贡献,特别是IVSC在显著性和腹侧注意网络中的贡献。就区域而言,重要的贡献主要来自特定大脑区域的连通性IV(例如,额下回,右前扣带皮层)。这一结果模式因年龄组而异。在65-74岁组中,连通性IV与吸烟呈正相关,在≥75岁组中与饮酒负相关。总体而言,随着年龄的增长,IVSC的贡献大于IVFC。这些发现表明,不健康的生活方式和社会孤立可能与神经资源的差异有关,而神经资源的差异可能与个体大脑异质性的增加有关,进而导致老年人认知能力下降,这支持了修订后的衰老与认知支架理论(STAC-r)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Aging and Disease
Aging and Disease GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
14.60
自引率
2.70%
发文量
138
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Aging & Disease (A&D) is an open-access online journal dedicated to publishing groundbreaking research on the biology of aging, the pathophysiology of age-related diseases, and innovative therapies for conditions affecting the elderly. The scope encompasses various diseases such as Stroke, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson’s disease, Epilepsy, Dementia, Depression, Cardiovascular Disease, Cancer, Arthritis, Cataract, Osteoporosis, Diabetes, and Hypertension. The journal welcomes studies involving animal models as well as human tissues or cells.
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