Regional Brain Changes in Aging Healthy Adults: General Trends, Individual Differences and Modifiers
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 9 February 2005
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cerebral Cortex
- Vol. 15 (11) , 1676-1689
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhi044
Abstract
Brain aging research relies mostly on cross-sectional studies, which infer true changes from age differences. We present longitudinal measures of five-year change in the regional brain volumes in healthy adults. Average and individual differences in volume changes and the effects of age, sex and hypertension were assessed with latent difference score modeling. The caudate, the cerebellum, the hippocampus and the association cortices shrunk substantially. There was minimal change in the entorhinal and none in the primary visual cortex. Longitudinal measures of shrinkage exceeded cross-sectional estimates. All regions except the inferior parietal lobule showed individual differences in change. Shrinkage of the cerebellum decreased from young to middle adulthood, and increased from middle adulthood to old age. Shrinkage of the hippocampus, the entorhinal cortices, the inferior temporal cortex and the prefrontal white matter increased with age. Moreover, shrinkage in the hippocampus and the cerebellum accelerated with age. In the hippocampus, both linear and quadratic trends in incremental age-related shrinkage were limited to the hypertensive participants. Individual differences in shrinkage correlated across some regions, suggesting common causes. No sex differences in age trends except for the caudate were observed. We found no evidence of neuroprotective effects of larger brain size or educational attainment.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- G Protein-Coupled Receptor-Dependent Development of Human Frontal CortexScience, 2004
- Methodological considerations for measuring rates of brain atrophyJournal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 2003
- Cross-sectional and longitudinal relationships among age, cognition, and processing speed.Psychology and Aging, 1999
- Brain reserve capacity on symptom onset after brain injury: A formulation and review of evidence for threshold theory.Neuropsychology, 1993
- Inverse relationship between education and parietotemporal perfusion deficit in Alzheimer's diseaseAnnals of Neurology, 1992
- Parallel Organization of Functionally Segregated Circuits Linking Basal Ganglia and CortexAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1986
- The CES-D ScaleApplied Psychological Measurement, 1977
- “Mini-mental state”Journal of Psychiatric Research, 1975
- How we should measure "change": Or should we?Psychological Bulletin, 1970
- The Association Between Quantitative Measures of Dementia and of Senile Change in the Cerebral Grey Matter of Elderly SubjectsThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1968