曾受感染与老年妇女海马体积较小有关

Vladimir Popov, S. Ukraintseva, Hongzhe Duan, K. Arbeev, A. Yashin
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摘要

越来越多的证据表明,感染可能在阿尔茨海默病(AD)中扮演重要角色,但由于可能涉及多种途径,其机制尚不清楚。一种可能是,感染可能通过促进神经元死亡直接导致神经退行性变。我们在英国生物库(UKB)参与者的子样本中探讨了感染史与脑海马体积(HV)(神经变性的主要生物标志物)之间的关系。感染性疾病诊断基于 ICD10 编码。左/右HV通过磁共振成像(MRI)测量,单位为立方毫米,并进行归一化处理。采用方差分析(ANOVA)、韦尔奇检验(Welch test)和回归法检验统计意义。我们发现,与无感染史的同龄妇女相比,60-75 岁和 65-80 岁有感染史的妇女的 HV 明显较低。左侧 HV 与右侧 HV 的效应大小随年龄的增长而增加。男性的结果没有达到统计学意义。我们的研究结果支持成年感染在女性神经变性中的重要作用。随着年龄的增长,感染对HV的不利影响会越来越大,这与衰老导致的恢复力下降和大脑对压力的脆弱性增加是一致的。观察到的左侧与右侧 HV 的效应大小增长更快,这可能表明女性的言语记忆随着时间的推移比视觉空间记忆退化得更快。观察到的性别差异可能反映了女性大脑更容易受到感染相关因素的影响,这反过来又可能导致女性比男性更容易罹患注意力缺失症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prior infections are associated with smaller hippocampal volume in older women
Accumulating evidence suggests that infections may play a major role in Alzheimer's disease (AD), however, mechanism is unclear, as multiple pathways may be involved. One possibility is that infections could contribute to neurodegeneration directly by promoting neuronal death. We explored relationships between history of infections and brain hippocampal volume (HV), a major biomarker of neurodegeneration, in a subsample of the UK Biobank (UKB) participants. Infectious disease diagnoses were based on ICD10 codes. The left/right HV was measured by the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in cubic millimeters and normalized. Analysis of variance (ANOVA), Welch test, and regression were used to examine statistical significance. We found that HV was significantly lower in women aged 60–75, as well as 65–80, years, with history of infections, compared to same age women without such history. The effect size increased with age faster for the left vs. right HV. Results for males didn't reach statistical significance. Results of our study support a major role of adult infections in neurodegeneration in women. The detrimental effect of infections on HV became stronger with age, in line with declining resilience and increasing brain vulnerability to stressors due to aging. The faster increase in the effect size observed for the left vs. right HV may indicate that female verbal memory degrades faster over time than visual-spatial memory. The observed sex difference may reflect a higher vulnerability of female brain to infection-related factors, which in turn may contribute to a higher risk of AD in women compared to men.
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