Quantitative fiber tracking of lateral and interhemispheric white matter systems in normal aging: Relations to timed performance

被引:245
作者
Sullivan, Edith V. [1 ]
Rohlfing, Torsten [2 ]
Pfefferbaum, Adolf [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Sch Med MC5723, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] SRI Int, Neurosci Program, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA
关键词
Brain; Aging; DTI; White matter; Fiber tracking; Diffusion; APPARENT DIFFUSION-COEFFICIENT; ADULT AGE-DIFFERENCES; CORPUS-CALLOSUM; IN-VIVO; HUMAN BRAIN; DIFFERENTIAL VULNERABILITY; FRACTIONAL ANISOTROPY; VOLUMETRIC-ANALYSIS; IMAGE REGISTRATION; HIV-INFECTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2008.04.007
中图分类号
R592 [老年病学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 100203 ;
摘要
The integrity of white matter, as measured in vivo with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), is disrupted in normal aging. A current consensus is that in adults advancing age affects anterior brain regions disproportionately more than posterior regions; however, the mainstay of studies supporting this anterior posterior gradient is based primarily on measures of the corpus callosum. Using our quantitative fiber tracking approach, we assessed fiber tract integrity of samples of major white matter cortical, subcortical, interhemispheric, and cerebellar systems (11 bilateral and 2 callosal) on DTI data collected at 1.5 T magnet strength. Participants were 55 men (age 20-78 years) and 65 women (age 28-81 years), deemed healthy and cognitively intact following interview and behavioral testing. Fiber integrity was measured as orientational diffusion coherence (fractional anisotropy, FA) and magnitude of diffusion, which was quantified separately for longitudinal diffusivity (lambda L), an index of axonal length or number, and transverse diffusivity (lambda T), an index of myelin integrity. Aging effects were more evident in diffusivity than FA measures. Men and women, examined separately, showed similar age-related increases in longitudinal and transverse diffusivity in fibers of the internal and external capsules bilaterally and the fornix. FA was lower and diffusivity higher in anterior than posterior fibers of regional paired comparisons (genu versus splenium and frontal versus occipital forceps). Diffusivity with older age was generally greater or FA lower in the superior than inferior fiber systems (longitudinal fasciculi, cingulate bundles), with little to no evidence for age-related degradation in pontine or cerebellar systems. The most striking sex difference emerged for the corpus callosum, for which men showed significant decline in FA and increase in longitudinal and transverse diffusivity in the genu but not splenium. By contrast, in women the age effect was present in both callosal regions, albeit modestly more so in the genu than splenium. Functional meaningfulness of these age-related differences was supported by significant correlations between DTI signs of white matter degradation and poorer performance on cognitive or motor tests. This survey of multiple fiber systems throughout the brain revealed a differential pattern of age's effect on regional FA and diffusivity and suggests mechanisms of functional degradation, attributed at least in part to compromised fiber microstructure affecting myelin and axonal morphology. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:464 / 481
页数:18
相关论文
共 114 条
  • [41] Adult age differences in the functional neuroanatomy of visual attention: A combined fMRI and DTI study
    Madden, David J.
    Spaniol, Julia
    Whiting, Wythe L.
    Bucur, Barbara
    Provenzale, James M.
    Cabeza, Roberto
    White, Leonard E.
    Huettel, Scott A.
    [J]. NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING, 2007, 28 (03) : 459 - 476
  • [42] Diffusion tensor imaging of adult age differences in cerebral white matter: relation to response time
    Madden, DJ
    Whiting, WL
    Huettel, SA
    White, LE
    MacFall, JR
    Provenzale, JM
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2004, 21 (03) : 1174 - 1181
  • [43] Frontal connections and cognitive changes in normal aging rhesus monkeys: A DTI study
    Makris, Nikos
    Papadimitriou, George M.
    van der Kouwe, Andre
    Kennedy, David N.
    Hodge, Steven M.
    Dale, Anders M.
    Benner, Thomas
    Wald, Lawrence L.
    Wu, Ona
    Tuch, David S.
    Caviness, Verne S.
    Moore, Tara L.
    Killiany, Ronald J.
    [J]. NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING, 2007, 28 (10) : 1556 - 1567
  • [44] AGE-RELATED WHITE MATTER ATROPHY IN THE HUMAN BRAIN
    MEIERRUGE, W
    ULRICH, J
    BRUHLMANN, M
    MEIER, E
    [J]. ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 1992, 673 : 260 - 269
  • [45] MR spectroscopy, functional MRI, and diffusion-tensor imaging in the aging brain: A conceptual review
    Minati, L.
    Grisoli, M.
    Bruzzone, M. G.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY AND NEUROLOGY, 2007, 20 (01) : 3 - 21
  • [46] Mori S, 1999, ANN NEUROL, V45, P265, DOI 10.1002/1531-8249(199902)45:2<265::AID-ANA21>3.0.CO
  • [47] 2-3
  • [48] Diffusion tensor imaging and aging - a review
    Moseley, M
    [J]. NMR IN BIOMEDICINE, 2002, 15 (7-8) : 553 - 560
  • [49] MOSELEY ME, 1990, ACT NEUR S, V51, P207
  • [50] Local-global interference is modulated by age, sex and anterior corpus callosum size
    Mueller-Oehring, Eva M.
    Schulte, Tilman
    Raassi, Carla
    Pfefferbaum, Adolf
    Sullivan, Edith V.
    [J]. BRAIN RESEARCH, 2007, 1142 : 189 - 205