Suppr超能文献

体重与大脑白质完整性:血管和炎症标志物的影响。

Body mass and white matter integrity: the influence of vascular and inflammatory markers.

机构信息

University of California, San Francisco, Neurology Department, Memory and Aging Center, San Francisco, California, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2013 Oct 16;8(10):e77741. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0077741. eCollection 2013.

Abstract

High adiposity is deleteriously associated with brain health, and may disproportionately affect white matter integrity; however, limited information exists regarding the mechanisms underlying the association between body mass (BMI) and white matter integrity. The present study evaluated whether vascular and inflammatory markers influence the relationship between BMI and white matter in healthy aging. We conducted a cross-sectional evaluation of white matter integrity, BMI, and vascular/inflammatory factors in a cohort of 138 healthy older adults (mean age: 71.3 years). Participants underwent diffusion tensor imaging, provided blood samples, and participated in a health evaluation. Vascular risk factors and vascular/inflammatory blood markers were assessed. The primary outcome measure was fractional anisotropy (FA) of the genu, body, and splenium (corpus callosum); exploratory measures included additional white matter regions, based on significant associations with BMI. Regression analyses indicated that higher BMI was associated with lower FA in the corpus callosum, cingulate, and fornix (p<.001). Vascular and inflammatory factors influenced the association between BMI and FA. Specifically, BMI was independently associated with the genu [β=-.21; B=-.0024; 95% CI, -.0048 to -.0000; p=.05] and cingulate fibers [β=-.39; B=-.0035; 95% CI,-.0056 to -.0015; p<.001], even after controlling for vascular/inflammatory risk factors and blood markers. In contrast, BMI was no longer significantly associated with the fornix and middle/posterior regions of the corpus callosum after controlling for these markers. Results partially support a vascular/inflammatory hypothesis, but also suggest a more complex relationship between BMI and white matter characterized by potentially different neuroanatomic vulnerability.

摘要

肥胖与大脑健康有害,可能对白质完整性有不成比例的影响;然而,关于体重指数(BMI)与白质完整性之间关联的机制的信息有限。本研究评估了血管和炎症标志物是否会影响健康衰老人群中 BMI 与白质之间的关系。我们对 138 名健康老年人(平均年龄:71.3 岁)的白质完整性、BMI 以及血管/炎症因子进行了横断面评估。参与者接受了弥散张量成像检查,提供了血液样本,并参加了健康评估。评估了血管危险因素和血管/炎症血液标志物。主要结果测量指标为胼胝体膝部、体部和压部(胼胝体)的分数各向异性(FA);根据与 BMI 的显著相关性,探索性测量指标包括其他白质区域。回归分析表明,BMI 越高,胼胝体、扣带回和穹窿的 FA 越低(p<.001)。血管和炎症因素影响了 BMI 和 FA 之间的关联。具体而言,BMI 与膝部 [β=-.21;B=-.0024;95%CI,-.0048 至 -.0000;p=.05] 和扣带回纤维 [β=-.39;B=-.0035;95%CI,-.0056 至 -.0015;p<.001] 独立相关,即使在控制了血管/炎症风险因素和血液标志物后也是如此。相比之下,在控制这些标志物后,BMI 与穹窿和胼胝体的中部/后部之间的相关性不再显著。研究结果部分支持血管/炎症假说,但也表明 BMI 与白质之间的关系更为复杂,其特征可能是神经解剖学易损性的不同。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ada9/3797689/01a05e62c731/pone.0077741.g001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验