Lower cardiac output is associated with neurodegeneration among older adults with normal cognition but not mild cognitive impairment

被引:0
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作者
Elizabeth E. Moore
Dandan Liu
Corey W. Bown
Hailey A. Kresge
Deepak K. Gupta
Kimberly R. Pechman
Lisa A. Mendes
L. Taylor Davis
Katherine A. Gifford
Adam W. Anderson
Thomas J. Wang
Bennett A. Landman
Timothy J. Hohman
Angela L. Jefferson
机构
[1] Vanderbilt University Medical Center,Vanderbilt Memory & Alzheimer’s Center
[2] Vanderbilt University,Medical Scientist Training Program, School of Medicine
[3] Vanderbilt University Medical Center,Department of Biostatistics
[4] Vanderbilt University Medical Center,Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Medicine
[5] Vanderbilt University Medical Center,Department of Neurology
[6] Vanderbilt University Medical Center,Department of Radiology & Radiological Sciences
[7] Vanderbilt University,Department of Biomedical Engineering
[8] Vanderbilt University,Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
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关键词
Cardiac output; Brain MRI; Neurodegeneration; Grey matter; White matter;
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学科分类号
摘要
Subclinical cardiac dysfunction is associated with smaller total brain volume on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). To study whether cardiac output relates to regional measurements of grey and white matter structure, older adults (n = 326) underwent echocardiogram to quantify cardiac output (L/min) and brain MRI. Linear regressions related cardiac output to grey matter volumes measured on T1 and white matter hyperintensities assessed on T2-FLAIR. Voxelwise analyses related cardiac output to diffusion tensor imaging adjusting for demographic, genetic, and vascular risk factors. Follow-up models assessed a cardiac output x diagnosis interaction with stratification (normal cognition, mild cognitive impairment). Cardiac output interacted with diagnosis, such that lower cardiac output related to smaller total grey matter (p = 0.01), frontal lobe (p = 0.01), and occipital lobe volumes (p = 0.01) among participants with normal cognition. When excluding participants with cardiovascular disease and atrial fibrillation, associations emerged with smaller parietal lobe (p = 0.005) and hippocampal volume (p = 0.05). Subtle age-related cardiac changes may disrupt neuronal homeostasis and impact grey matter integrity prior to cognitive impairment.
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页码:2040 / 2050
页数:10
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