ABSTRACT
Many sleep less than recommended without experiencing daytime sleepiness. According to prevailing views, short sleep increases risk of lower brain health and cognitive function. Chronic mild sleep deprivation could cause undetected sleep debt, negatively affecting cognitive function and brain health. However, it is possible that some have less sleep need and are more resistant to negative effects of sleep loss. We investigated this using a cross-sectional and longitudinal sample of 47,029 participants of both sexes (20-89 years) from the Lifebrain consortium, Human Connectome project (HCP) and UK Biobank (UKB), with measures of self-reported sleep, including 51,295 MRIs of the brain and cognitive tests. A total of 740 participants who reported to sleep <6 h did not experience daytime sleepiness or sleep problems/disturbances interfering with falling or staying asleep. These short sleepers showed significantly larger regional brain volumes than both short sleepers with daytime sleepiness and sleep problems (n = 1742) and participants sleeping the recommended 7-8 h (n = 3886). However, both groups of short sleepers showed slightly lower general cognitive function (GCA), 0.16 and 0.19 SDs, respectively. Analyses using accelerometer-estimated sleep duration confirmed the findings, and the associations remained after controlling for body mass index, depression symptoms, income, and education. The results suggest that some people can cope with less sleep without obvious negative associations with brain morphometry and that sleepiness and sleep problems may be more related to brain structural differences than duration. However, the slightly lower performance on tests of general cognitive abilities warrants closer examination in natural settings.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Short habitual sleep is prevalent, with unknown consequences for brain health and cognitive performance. Here, we show that daytime sleepiness and sleep problems are more strongly related to regional brain volumes than sleep duration. However, participants sleeping ≤6 h had slightly lower scores on tests of general cognitive function (GCA). This indicates that sleep need is individual and that sleep duration per se is very weakly if at all related brain health, while daytime sleepiness and sleep problems may show somewhat stronger associations. The association between habitual short sleep and lower scores on tests of general cognitive abilities must be further scrutinized in natural settings.
Subject(s)
Disorders of Excessive Somnolence , Sleep Wake Disorders , Male , Female , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Sleep , Sleep Deprivation/diagnostic imaging , Sleep Wake Disorders/complications , Cognition , Disorders of Excessive Somnolence/complications , Disorders of Excessive Somnolence/diagnosisABSTRACT
Higher socio-economic status (SES) has been proposed to have facilitating and protective effects on brain and cognition. We ask whether relationships between SES, brain volumes and cognitive ability differ across cohorts, by age and national origin. European and US cohorts covering the lifespan were studied (4-97 years, N = 500 000; 54 000 w/brain imaging). There was substantial heterogeneity across cohorts for all associations. Education was positively related to intracranial (ICV) and total gray matter (GM) volume. Income was related to ICV, but not GM. We did not observe reliable differences in associations as a function of age. SES was more strongly related to brain and cognition in US than European cohorts. Sample representativity varies, and this study cannot identify mechanisms underlying differences in associations across cohorts. Differences in neuroanatomical volumes partially explained SES-cognition relationships. SES was more strongly related to ICV than to GM, implying that SES-cognition relations in adulthood are less likely grounded in neuroprotective effects on GM volume in aging. The relatively stronger SES-ICV associations rather are compatible with SES-brain volume relationships being established early in life, as ICV stabilizes in childhood. The findings underscore that SES has no uniform association with, or impact on, brain and cognition.
Subject(s)
Brain , Longevity , Adult , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Cognition , Gray Matter/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Social ClassABSTRACT
The apolipoprotein E gene ε4 allele (APOE ε4) and higher circulating level of C-reactive protein (CRP) have been extensively investigated as risk factors for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Paradoxically, APOE ε4 has been associated with lower levels of blood CRP in middle-aged and older populations. However, few studies have investigated this intriguing relation and its impact on neurological markers for AD in younger ages, nor across the whole lifespan. Here, we examine associations of blood CRP levels, APOE ε4, and biomarkers for AD in a cognitively healthy lifespan cohort (N up to 749; 20-81 years of age) and replicate the findings in UK Biobank (N = 304 322; 37-72 years of age), the developmental ABCD study (N = 10 283; 9-11 years of age), and a middle-aged sample (N = 339; 40-65 years of age). Hippocampal volume, brain amyloid-ß (Aß) plaque levels, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of Aß and tau species, and neurofilament protein light protein (NFL) were used as AD biomarkers in subsamples. In addition, we examined the genetic contribution to the variation of CRP levels over different CRP ranges using polygenic scores for CRP (PGS-CRP). Our results show APOE ε4 consistently associates with low blood CRP levels across all age groups (p < 0.05). Strikingly, both ε4 and PGS-CRP associated mainly with blood CRP levels within the low range (<5mg/L). We then show both APOE ε4 and high CRP levels associate with smaller hippocampus volumes across the lifespan (p < 0.025). APOE ε4 was associated with high Aß plaque levels in the brain (FDR-corrected p = 8.69x10-4), low levels of CSF Aß42 (FDR-corrected p = 6.9x10-2), and lower ratios of Aß42 to Aß40 (FDR-corrected p = 5.08x10-5). Blood CRP levels were weakly correlated with higher ratio of CSF Aß42 to Aß40 (p = 0.03, FDR-corrected p = 0.4). APOE ε4 did not correlate with blood concentrations of another 9 inflammatory cytokines, and none of these cytokines correlated with AD biomarkers. CONCLUSION: The inverse correlation between APOEε 4 and blood CRP levels existed before any pathological AD biomarker was observed, and only in the low CRP level range. Thus, we suggest to investigate whether APOEε 4 can confer risk by being associated with a lower inflammatory response to daily exposures, possibly leading to greater accumulation of low-grade inflammatory stress throughout life. A lifespan perspective is needed to understand this relationship concerning risk of developing AD.
Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Apolipoprotein E4 , Aged , Alzheimer Disease/metabolism , Amyloid beta-Peptides/metabolism , Apolipoprotein E4/genetics , Apolipoprotein E4/metabolism , Biomarkers/metabolism , Brain/metabolism , C-Reactive Protein/metabolism , Humans , Longevity/genetics , Middle Aged , Peptide Fragments/metabolism , tau Proteins/metabolismABSTRACT
It has been suggested that specific forms of cognition in older age rely largely on late-life specific mechanisms. Here instead, we tested using task-fMRI (n = 540, age 6-82 years) whether the functional foundations of successful episodic memory encoding adhere to a principle of lifespan continuity, shaped by developmental, structural, and evolutionary influences. We clustered regions of the cerebral cortex according to the shape of the lifespan trajectory of memory activity in each region so that regions showing the same pattern were clustered together. The results revealed that lifespan trajectories of memory encoding function showed a continuity through life but no evidence of age-specific mechanisms such as compensatory patterns. Encoding activity was related to general cognitive abilities and variations of grey matter as captured by a multi-modal independent component analysis, variables reflecting core aspects of cognitive and structural change throughout the lifespan. Furthermore, memory encoding activity aligned to fundamental aspects of brain organization, such as large-scale connectivity and evolutionary cortical expansion gradients. Altogether, we provide novel support for a perspective on memory aging in which maintenance and decay of episodic memory in older age needs to be understood from a comprehensive life-long perspective rather than as a late-life phenomenon only.
Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Brain/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Longevity/physiology , Memory, Episodic , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/trends , Male , Middle Aged , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Young AdultABSTRACT
We examined whether sleep quality and quantity are associated with cortical and memory changes in cognitively healthy participants across the adult lifespan. Associations between self-reported sleep parameters (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, PSQI) and longitudinal cortical change were tested using five samples from the Lifebrain consortium (n = 2205, 4363 MRIs, 18-92 years). In additional analyses, we tested coherence with cell-specific gene expression maps from the Allen Human Brain Atlas, and relations to changes in memory performance. "PSQI # 1 Subjective sleep quality" and "PSQI #5 Sleep disturbances" were related to thinning of the right lateral temporal cortex, with lower quality and more disturbances being associated with faster thinning. The association with "PSQI #5 Sleep disturbances" emerged after 60 years, especially in regions with high expression of genes related to oligodendrocytes and S1 pyramidal neurons. None of the sleep scales were related to a longitudinal change in episodic memory function, suggesting that sleep-related cortical changes were independent of cognitive decline. The relationship to cortical brain change suggests that self-reported sleep parameters are relevant in lifespan studies, but small effect sizes indicate that self-reported sleep is not a good biomarker of general cortical degeneration in healthy older adults.
Subject(s)
Aging/pathology , Cerebral Cortical Thinning/diagnostic imaging , Longevity , Memory Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Self Report , Sleep Wake Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Aging/psychology , Cerebral Cortical Thinning/epidemiology , Cerebral Cortical Thinning/psychology , Cognitive Dysfunction/diagnostic imaging , Cognitive Dysfunction/pathology , Cognitive Dysfunction/psychology , Female , Humans , Longevity/physiology , Longitudinal Studies , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/trends , Male , Memory Disorders/epidemiology , Memory Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Sleep Quality , Sleep Wake Disorders/epidemiology , Sleep Wake Disorders/psychology , Young AdultABSTRACT
There is evidence for a hippocampal long axis anterior-posterior (AP) differentiation in memory processing, which may have implications for the changes in episodic memory performance seen across development and aging. The hippocampus shows substantial structural changes with age, but the lifespan trajectories of hippocampal sub-regions along the AP axis are not established. The aim of the present study was to test whether the micro- and macro-structural age-trajectories of the anterior (aHC) and posterior (pHC) hippocampus are different. In a single-center longitudinal study, 1,790 cognitively healthy participants, 4.1-93.4 years of age, underwent a total of 3,367 MRI examinations and 3,033 memory tests sessions over 1-6 time points, spanning an interval up to 11.1 years. T1-weighted scans were used to estimate the volume of aHC and pHC (macrostructure), and diffusion tensor imaging to measure mean diffusion (MD, microstructure) within each region. We found that the macro- and microstructural lifespan-trajectories of aHC and pHC were clearly distinguishable, with partly common and partly unique variance shared with age. aHC showed a protracted period of microstructural development, while pHC microstructural development as indexed by MD was more or less completed in early childhood. In contrast, pHC showed larger unique aging-related changes. An aHC-pHC difference was also observed for volume, with pHC changing relatively more with higher age. All regions showed age-dependent relationships with episodic memory. aHC micro- and macrostructure was significantly related to verbal memory independently of age, but the relationships were still strongest among the older participants. We suggest that memory processes supported by each sub-region improve or decline in concert with volumetric and microstructural changes in the same age-period. Future research should disentangle the lifespan relationship between changes in these structural properties and different memory processes, encoding versus retrieval in particular, as well as other cognitive functions depending on the hippocampal long-axis specialization.
Subject(s)
Hippocampus/diagnostic imaging , Hippocampus/physiology , Longevity/physiology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/trends , Memory/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Hippocampus/cytology , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Memory, Episodic , Middle Aged , Young AdultABSTRACT
Change in hippocampal function is a major factor in life span development and decline of episodic memory. Evidence indicates a long-axis specialization where anterior hippocampus is more engaged during encoding than during retrieval, and posterior more engaged during retrieval than during encoding. We tested the life span trajectory of hippocampal long-axis episodic memory-related activity and functional connectivity (FC) in 496 participants (6.8-80.8 years) encoding and retrieving associative memories. We found evidence for a long-axis encoding-retrieval specialization that declined linearly during development and aging, eventually vanishing in the older adults. This was mainly driven by age effects on retrieval, which was associated with gradually lower activity from childhood to adulthood, followed by positive age relationships until 70 years. This pattern of age effects characterized task engagement regardless of memory success or failure. Especially for retrieval, children engaged posterior hippocampus more than anterior, while anterior was relatively more activated already in teenagers. Significant intrahippocampal connectivity was found during task, which declined with age. The results suggest that hippocampal long-axis differentiation and communication during episodic memory tasks develop rapidly during childhood, are different in older compared with younger adults, and that the age effects are related to task engagement, not the successful retrieval of episodic memories specifically.
Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Hippocampus/physiology , Memory, Episodic , Mental Recall , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Child , Female , Functional Neuroimaging , Hippocampus/diagnostic imaging , Hippocampus/physiopathology , Humans , Linear Models , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Young AdultABSTRACT
The formation of episodic memories is associated with deactivation during encoding and activation during retrieval in the posteromedial cortex (PMC). We hypothesized that the encoding/retrieval (E/R) flip is a critical component of episodic memory across the lifespan because structural and metabolic changes in the PMC coincide with the fine tuning of the episodic memory system in development and the reductions of memory performance in aging. The aims of the present study were, first, to describe lifespan trajectories of PMC encoding and retrieval activity in 270 human participants (167 females) from 6 to 80 years of age. Our second goal was to construct a model for episodic memory development in which contributions from brain activity, cortical thickness (CT), and structural connectivity are accounted for. We found that modulation of neural activity in response to memory encoding and retrieval demands was not fully developed until adolescence and decreased from adulthood through old age. The magnitude of the E/R flip was related to source memory and 55% of the age-related variance in source memory performance during childhood and adolescence could be accounted for by the E/R flip, CT, and mean diffusivity together. However, only CT and the E/R flip provided unique contributions with which to explain memory performance. The results suggest that neural dynamics in the PMC is related to the development of episodic memory during childhood and adolescence. The similar trajectories of the E/R flip and episodic memory emergence and decline through development and aging further suggests that a lifelong relationship exists.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Modulation of neural activity in the posteromedial cortex (PMC) in response to memory encoding/retrieval (E/R) demands (E/R flip) does not reach its peak until adolescence and decreases from adulthood through old age. The magnitude of the E/R flip is related to source memory and 55% of the age-related variance in source memory performance during childhood and adolescence can be accounted for by the E/R flip and brain structure together. The results suggest that neural dynamics in the PMC is related to the development of episodic memory function during childhood and adolescence and the similar trajectories of the E/R flip and episodic memory performance through development and aging suggests that a lifelong relationship exists.
Subject(s)
Longevity , Memory, Episodic , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain Mapping , Child , Female , Hippocampus/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Middle Aged , Models, Neurological , Neuropsychological Tests , Parietal Lobe/growth & development , Young AdultABSTRACT
Neurodevelopmental origins of functional variation in older age are increasingly being acknowledged, but identification of how early factors impact human brain and cognition throughout life has remained challenging. Much focus has been on age-specific mechanisms affecting neural foundations of cognition and their change. In contrast to this approach, we tested whether cerebral correlates of general cognitive ability (GCA) in development could be extended to the rest of the lifespan, and whether early factors traceable to prenatal stages, such as birth weight and parental education, may exert continuous influences. We measured the area of the cerebral cortex in a longitudinal sample of 974 individuals aged 4-88 y (1,633 observations). An extensive cortical region was identified wherein area related positively to GCA in development. By tracking area of the cortical region identified in the child sample throughout the lifespan, we showed that the cortical change trajectories of higher and lower GCA groups were parallel through life, suggesting continued influences of early life factors. Birth weight and parental education obtained from the Norwegian Mother-Child Cohort study were identified as such early factors of possible life-long influence. Support for a genetic component was obtained in a separate twin sample (Vietnam Era Twin Study of Aging), but birth weight in the child sample had an effect on cortical area also when controlling for possible genetic differences in terms of parental height. Our results provide novel evidence for stability in brain-cognition relationships throughout life, and indicate that early life factors impact brain and cognition for the entire life course.
Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/growth & development , Cognition , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Birth Weight , Cerebral Cortex/anatomy & histology , Child , Child, Preschool , Cohort Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mother-Child Relations , Young AdultABSTRACT
At a large scale, the human brain is organized into modules of interconnected regions, some of which play opposing roles in supporting cognition. In particular, the Default-Mode Network (DMN) has been linked to operations on internal representations, while task-positive networks are recruited during interactions with the external world. Here, we test the hypothesis that the generation of durable long-term memories depends on optimal recruitment of such antagonistic large-scale networks. As long-term memory consolidation is a process ongoing for days and weeks after an experience, we propose that individuals characterized by strong decoupling of the DMN and task-positive networks at rest operate in a mode beneficial for the long-term stabilization of episodic memories. To capture network connectivity unaffected by transient task demands and representative of brain behavior outside an experimental setting, 87 participants were scanned during rest before performing an associative encoding task. To link individual resting-state functional connectivity patterns to time-dependent memory consolidation processes, participants were given an unannounced memory test, either after a brief interval or after a retention period of ~6 weeks. We found that participants with a resting state characterized by high synchronicity in a DMN-centered network system and low synchronicity between task-positive networks showed superior recollection weeks after encoding. These relationships were not observed for information probed only hours after encoding. Furthermore, the two network systems were found to be anticorrelated. Our results suggest that this memory-relevant antagonism between DMN and task-positive networks is maintained through complex regulatory interactions between the systems.
Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Memory Consolidation/physiology , Memory, Episodic , Memory, Long-Term/physiology , Adult , Brain Mapping , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neural Pathways/physiology , Young AdultABSTRACT
Extensive efforts are devoted to understand the functional (FC) and structural connections (SC) of the brain. FC is usually measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), and conceptualized as degree of synchronicity in brain activity between different regions. SC is typically indexed by measures of white matter (WM) properties, for example, by diffusion weighted imaging (DWI). FC and SC are intrinsically related, in that coordination of activity across regions ultimately depends on fast and efficient transfer of information made possible by structural connections. Convergence between FC and SC has been shown for specific networks, especially the default mode network (DMN). However, it is not known to what degree FC is constrained by major WM tracts and whether FC and SC change together over time. Here, 120 participants (20-85 years) were tested at two time points, separated by 3.3 years. Resting-state fMRI was used to measure FC, and DWI to measure WM microstructure as an index of SC. TRACULA, part of FreeSurfer, was used for automated tractography of 18 major WM tracts. Cortical regions with tight structural couplings defined by tractography were only weakly related at the functional level. Certain regions of the DMN showed a modest relationship between change in FC and SC, but for the most part, the two measures changed independently. The main conclusions are that anatomical alignment of SC and FC seems restricted to specific networks and tracts, and that changes in SC and FC are not necessarily strongly correlated. Hum Brain Mapp 38:561-573, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/physiology , Models, Neurological , Neural Pathways/diagnostic imaging , Neural Pathways/physiology , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain Mapping , Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Female , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Longitudinal Studies , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Mental Status Schedule , Middle Aged , Oxygen/blood , Rest , Young AdultABSTRACT
The human cerebral cortex undergoes a protracted, regionally heterogeneous development well into young adulthood. Cortical areas that expand the most during human development correspond to those that differ most markedly when the brains of macaque monkeys and humans are compared. However, it remains unclear to what extent this relationship derives from allometric scaling laws that apply to primate brains in general, or represents unique evolutionary adaptations. Furthermore, it is unknown whether the relationship only applies to surface area (SA), or also holds for cortical thickness (CT). In 331 participants aged 4 to 30, we calculated age functions of SA and CT, and examined the correspondence of human cortical development with macaque to human expansion, and with expansion across nonhuman primates. CT followed a linear negative age function from 4 to 30 years, while SA showed positive age functions until 12 years with little further development. Differential cortical expansion across primates was related to regional maturation of SA and CT, with age trajectories differing between high- and low-expanding cortical regions. This relationship adhered to allometric scaling laws rather than representing uniquely macaque-human differences: regional correspondence with human development was as large for expansion across nonhuman primates as between humans and macaque.
Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/growth & development , Neuroanatomy , Problem Solving/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Biological Evolution , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Macaca , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Neuroanatomy/methods , Young AdultABSTRACT
We continuously encounter and process novel events in the surrounding world, but only some episodes will leave detailed memory traces that can be recollected after weeks and months. Here, our aim was to monitor brain activity during encoding of events that eventually transforms into long-term stable memories. Previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have shown that the degree of activation of different brain regions during encoding is predictive of later recollection success. However, most of these studies tested participants' memories the same day as encoding occurred, whereas several lines of research suggest that extended post-encoding processing is of crucial importance for long-term consolidation. Using fMRI, we tested whether the same encoding mechanisms are predictive of recollection success after hours as after a retention interval of several weeks. Seventy-eight participants were scanned during an associative encoding task and given a source memory test the same day or after â¼6 weeks. We found a strong link between regional activity levels during encoding and recollection success over short time intervals. However, results further showed that durable source memories, i.e., events recollected after several weeks, were not simply the events associated with the highest activity levels at encoding. Rather, strong levels of connectivity between the right hippocampus and perceptual areas, as well as with parts of the self-referential default-mode network, seemed instrumental in establishing durable source memories. Thus, we argue that an initial intensity-based encoding is necessary for short-term encoding of events, whereas additional processes involving hippocampal-cortical communication aid transformation into stable long-term memories.
Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Hippocampus/physiology , Memory, Episodic , Mental Recall/physiology , Retention, Psychology/physiology , Adult , Association Learning/physiology , Brain Mapping , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Time Factors , Young AdultABSTRACT
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is regarded a human-specific condition, and it has been suggested that brain regions highly expanded in humans compared with other primates are selectively targeted. We calculated shared and unique variance in the distribution of AD atrophy accounted for by cortical expansion between macaque and human, affiliation to the default mode network (DMN), ontogenetic development and normal aging. Cortical expansion was moderately related to atrophy, but a critical discrepancy was seen in the medial temporo-parietal episodic memory network. Identification of "hotspots" and "coldspots" of expansion across several primate species did not yield compelling evidence for the hypothesis that highly expanded regions are specifically targeted. Controlling for distribution of atrophy in aging substantially attenuated the expansion-AD relationship. A path model showed that all variables explained unique variance in AD atrophy but were generally mediated through aging. This supports a systems-vulnerability model, where critical networks are subject to various negative impacts, aging in particular, rather than being selectively targeted in AD. An alternative approach is suggested, focused on the interplay of the phylogenetically old and preserved medial temporal lobe areas with more highly expanded association cortices governed by different principles of plasticity and stability.
Subject(s)
Aging/pathology , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Cortex/pathology , Models, Neurological , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Alzheimer Disease/genetics , Animals , Atrophy/pathology , Female , Humans , Macaca mulatta , Male , Middle AgedABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Advances in the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have led to great improvements in survival rates and outcomes, but there is concern about cognitive late effects. We aimed to determine whether ALL survivors have smaller cortical surface area and/or thickness, and test whether this is related to disease and treatment variables and self-reported executive functioning in everyday life. PROCEDURE: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans from 130 adult long-term survivors of childhood ALL (age: 18-46 years; age at diagnosis: 0-16 years; years since diagnosis: 7-40) and 130 healthy controls were assessed to estimate and compare regional cortical surface area and thickness. Information on disease and treatment factors were obtained from patients' records, and executive functioning in survivors was measured using a validated questionnaire (BRIEF-A). RESULTS: Smaller cortical surface area was observed in several regions in both cerebral hemispheres in ALL survivors. In these regions, mean surface area was 4.1-5.5% smaller in ALL survivors compared to healthy controls. In contrast, only one region showed lower cortical thickness in ALL survivors. There were no significant associations between cortical surface area/thickness in these regions and disease or treatment variables. In ALL survivors, smaller surface area in prefrontal regions, encompassing parts of the superior frontal gyri and the left anterior cingulate cortex, was associated with problems in executive functioning, specifically with emotional control and self-monitoring. CONCLUSIONS: ALL survivors had smaller surface area in several cortical regions and smaller surface area in prefrontal regions was associated with reported problems in executive functioning.
Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/pathology , Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma/pathology , Survivors , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Executive Function , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma/mortalityABSTRACT
Background: Stimulant medication is commonly prescribed as treatment for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). While we previously found that short-term stimulant-treatment influences apparent cortical thickness development in an age-dependent manner, it remains unknown whether these effects persist throughout development into adulthood. Purpose: Investigate the long-term age-dependent effects of stimulant medication use on apparent cortical thickness development in adolescents and adults previously diagnosed with ADHD. Methods: This prospective study included the baseline and 4-year follow-up assessment of the "effects of Psychotropic drugs On the Developing brain-MPH" ("ePOD-MPH") project, conducted between June-1-2011 and December-28-2019. The analyses were pre-registered (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/32BHF). T1-weighted MR scans were obtained from male adolescents and adults, and cortical thickness was estimated for predefined regions of interest (ROIs) using Freesurfer. We determined medication use and assessed symptoms of ADHD, anxiety, and depression at both time points. Linear mixed models were constructed to assess main effects and interactions of stimulant medication use, time, and age group on regional apparent cortical thickness. Results: A total of 32 male adolescents (aged mean ± SD, 11.2 ± 0.9 years at baseline) and 24 men (aged mean ± SD, 29.9 ± 5.0 years at baseline) were included that previously participated in the ePOD-MPH project. We found no evidence for long-term effects of stimulant medication use on ROI apparent cortical thickness. As expected, we did find age-by-time interaction effects in all ROIs (left prefrontal ROI: P=.002, right medial and posterior ROIs: P<.001), reflecting reductions in apparent cortical thickness in adolescents. Additionally, ADHD symptom severity (adolescents: P<.001, adults: P=.001) and anxiety symptoms (adolescents: P=0.03) were reduced, and more improvement of ADHD symptoms was associated with higher medication use in adults (P=0.001). Conclusion: We found no evidence for long-term effects of stimulant-treatment for ADHD on apparent cortical thickness development in adolescents and adults. The identified age-dependent differences in apparent cortical thickness development are consistent with existing literature on typical cortical development.
ABSTRACT
Inflammatory responses to acute stimuli are proposed to regulate sleep, but the relationship between chronic inflammation and habitual sleep duration is elusive. Here, we study this relation using genetically predicted level of chronic inflammation, indexed by CRP and IL6 signaling, and self-reported sleep duration. By Mendelian randomization analysis, we show that elevated CRP level within <10 mg/L has a homeostatic effect that facilitates maintaining 7-8 h sleep duration per day - making short-sleepers sleep longer (p = 2.42 × 10-2) and long-sleepers sleep shorter (1.87 × 10-7); but it is not associated with the overall sleep duration (p = 0.17). This homeostatic effect replicated in an independent CRP dataset. We observed causal effects of the soluble interleukin 6 receptor and gp130 on overall sleep duration (p = 1.62 × 10-8, p = 2.61 × 10-58, respectively), but these effects disappeared when CRP effects were accounted for in the model. Using polygenic score analysis, we found that the homeostatic effect of CRP on sleep duration stems primarily from the genetic variants within the CRP gene region: when genetic variants outside of this region were used to predict CRP levels, the opposite direction of effect was observed. In conclusion, we show that elevated CRP level may causally facilitate maintaining an optimal sleep duration that is beneficial to health, thus updating our current knowledge of immune regulation on sleep.
ABSTRACT
Human fetal development has been associated with brain health at later stages. It is unknown whether growth in utero, as indexed by birth weight (BW), relates consistently to lifespan brain characteristics and changes, and to what extent these influences are of a genetic or environmental nature. Here we show remarkably stable and lifelong positive associations between BW and cortical surface area and volume across and within developmental, aging and lifespan longitudinal samples (N = 5794, 4-82 y of age, w/386 monozygotic twins, followed for up to 8.3 y w/12,088 brain MRIs). In contrast, no consistent effect of BW on brain changes was observed. Partly environmental effects were indicated by analysis of twin BW discordance. In conclusion, the influence of prenatal growth on cortical topography is stable and reliable through the lifespan. This early-life factor appears to influence the brain by association of brain reserve, rather than brain maintenance. Thus, fetal influences appear omnipresent in the spacetime of the human brain throughout the human lifespan. Optimizing fetal growth may increase brain reserve for life, also in aging.
Subject(s)
Fetus , Longevity , Female , Pregnancy , Humans , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Aging , Birth WeightABSTRACT
PURPOSE: To evaluate the relationship between (a) pathologic levels of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) total tau as an index of the intensity of ongoing neuronal degeneration and (b) longitudinal changes in white matter (WM) integrity in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Participants gave written informed consent, and the Norwegian committee for medical research ethics approved the study. Thirty patients with MCI and nonpathologic CSF total tau levels, nine patients with MCI and pathologic CSF total tau levels, and 16 age-matched healthy control subjects underwent diffusion-tensor imaging at baseline and after a mean follow-up of 2.6 years ± 0.54 (standard deviation), with range of 1.58-3.98 years. The effect of diagnosis (MCI vs no MCI) at baseline and CSF tau levels at fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity, radial diffusivity (D(R)), and axial diffusivity were tested with tract-based spatial statistics. Differences in WM integrity at baseline and follow-up and change over time were compared among patients with pathologic CSF total tau levels (MCI high tau), patients with normal CSF total tau levels (MCI low tau), and healthy control subjects. Linear mixed-model between-group within-subject analyses were conducted to examine differences in rate of change over time in FA and D(R). RESULTS: Longitudinal analysis of regional WM change revealed significant decrease in FA (P = .038) and increase in D(R) (P = .018) in the MCI high-tau group relative to control subjects. For D(R), the changes were regionally specific to the right cingulum and the right superior and inferior longitudinal fasciculi. CONCLUSION: Reduction in WM integrity was greater in patients with MCI who had the most intense neuronal degeneration as indexed by using CSF total tau, suggesting that these patients might represent a subgroup of MCI with more intense WM degeneration who are possibly at greater risk of developing Alzheimer disease.
Subject(s)
Cognitive Dysfunction/cerebrospinal fluid , Cognitive Dysfunction/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/pathology , Neurons/pathology , tau Proteins/cerebrospinal fluid , Adult , Aged , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Statistics as TopicABSTRACT
Cortical asymmetry is a ubiquitous feature of brain organization that is subtly altered in some neurodevelopmental disorders, yet we lack knowledge of how its development proceeds across life in health. Achieving consensus on the precise cortical asymmetries in humans is necessary to uncover the developmental timing of asymmetry and the extent to which it arises through genetic and later influences in childhood. Here, we delineate population-level asymmetry in cortical thickness and surface area vertex-wise in seven datasets and chart asymmetry trajectories longitudinally across life (4-89 years; observations = 3937; 70% longitudinal). We find replicable asymmetry interrelationships, heritability maps, and test asymmetry associations in large-scale data. Cortical asymmetry was robust across datasets. Whereas areal asymmetry is predominantly stable across life, thickness asymmetry grows in childhood and peaks in early adulthood. Areal asymmetry is low-moderately heritable (max h2SNP ~19%) and correlates phenotypically and genetically in specific regions, indicating coordinated development of asymmetries partly through genes. In contrast, thickness asymmetry is globally interrelated across the cortex in a pattern suggesting highly left-lateralized individuals tend towards left-lateralization also in population-level right-asymmetric regions (and vice versa), and exhibits low or absent heritability. We find less areal asymmetry in the most consistently lateralized region in humans associates with subtly lower cognitive ability, and confirm small handedness and sex effects. Results suggest areal asymmetry is developmentally stable and arises early in life through genetic but mainly subject-specific stochastic effects, whereas childhood developmental growth shapes thickness asymmetry and may lead to directional variability of global thickness lateralization in the population.