健康老龄化过程中的热心理物理学和相关大脑激活模式。

Paul A Beach, Ronald L Cowan, Mary S Dietrich, Stephen P Bruehl, Sebastian W Atalla, Todd B Monroe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的研究健康老年人对无害和疼痛热刺激的心理物理和大脑激活模式:方法:单中心、横断面、被试内设计:对 37 名健康老年人(65-97 岁,中位数 = 73 岁)进行了热知觉心理物理学(温暖、轻度和中度疼痛)测试。获得感知阈值(摄氏度)和不快感评分(0-20 分制),然后在功能磁共振成像扫描中应用。一般线性模型评估了年龄对心理物理结果的影响。多重线性回归用于检验大脑激活对年龄和心理物理报告的主效应和交互效应。具体来说,通过比较 73 岁以上/73 岁以下(中位数分割)的百分比信号变化斜率来检验不同年龄的影响:结果:年龄越大,热感知阈值越高(z = 2.09,P = 0.037),这与年龄和温暖检测相关性(r = 0.33,P = 0.048)有关。在 "年龄较大 "与 "年龄较小 "的个体中,温度检测阈值越大,海马激活越少(>/ 0.44,P 结论:年龄越大,海马激活越少:随着年龄的增长,注意力/新奇事物检测和认知功能会发生与年龄相关的变化,这可能会导致热感觉的改变以及(在某些情况下)痛觉的改变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Thermal Psychophysics and Associated Brain Activation Patterns Along a Continuum of Healthy Aging.

Objective: To examine psychophysical and brain activation patterns to innocuous and painful thermal stimulation along a continuum of healthy older adults.

Design: Single center, cross-sectional, within-subjects design.

Methods: Thermal perceptual psychophysics (warmth, mild, and moderate pain) were tested in 37 healthy older adults (65-97 years, median = 73 years). Percept thresholds (oC) and unpleasantness ratings (0-20 scale) were obtained and then applied during functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning. General linear modeling assessed effects of age on psychophysical results. Multiple linear regressions were used to test the main and interaction effects of brain activation against age and psychophysical reports. Specifically, differential age effects were examined by comparing percent-signal change slopes between those above/below age 73 (a median split).

Results: Advancing age was associated with greater thresholds for thermal perception (z = 2.09, P = 0.037), which was driven by age and warmth detection correlation (r = 0.33, P = 0.048). Greater warmth detection thresholds were associated with reduced hippocampal activation in "older" vs "younger" individuals (>/<73 years; beta < 0.40, P < 0.01). Advancing age, in general, was correlated with greater activation of the middle cingulate gyrus (beta > 0.44, P < 0.01) during mild pain. Differential age effects were found for prefrontal activation during moderate pain. In "older" individuals, higher moderate pain thresholds and greater degrees of moderate pain unpleasantness correlated with lesser prefrontal activation (anterolateral prefrontal cortex and middle-frontal operculum; beta < -0.39, P < 0.009); the opposite pattern was found in "younger" individuals.

Conclusions: Advancing age may lead to altered thermal sensation and (in some circumstances) altered pain perception secondary to age-related changes in attention/novelty detection and cognitive functions.

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