Sala-Llonch Roser, Bartrés-Faz David, Junqué Carme
Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychobiology, University of Barcelona , Barcelona, Spain.
Front Psychol. 2015 May 21;6:663. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00663. eCollection 2015.
Healthy aging (HA) is associated with certain declines in cognitive functions, even in individuals that are free of any process of degenerative illness. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has been widely used in order to link this age-related cognitive decline with patterns of altered brain function. A consistent finding in the fMRI literature is that healthy old adults present higher activity levels in some brain regions during the performance of cognitive tasks. This finding is usually interpreted as a compensatory mechanism. More recent approaches have focused on the study of functional connectivity, mainly derived from resting state fMRI, and have concluded that the higher levels of activity coexist with disrupted connectivity. In this review, we aim to provide a state-of-the-art description of the usefulness and the interpretations of functional brain connectivity in the context of HA. We first give a background that includes some basic aspects and methodological issues regarding functional connectivity. We summarize the main findings and the cognitive models that have been derived from task-activity studies, and we then review the findings provided by resting-state functional connectivity in HA. Finally, we suggest some future directions in this field of research. A common finding of the studies included is that older subjects present reduced functional connectivity compared to young adults. This reduced connectivity affects the main brain networks and explains age-related cognitive alterations. Remarkably, the default mode network appears as a highly compromised system in HA. Overall, the scenario given by both activity and connectivity studies also suggests that the trajectory of changes during task may differ from those observed during resting-state. We propose that the use of complex modeling approaches studying effective connectivity may help to understand context-dependent functional reorganizations in the aging process.
健康衰老(HA)与认知功能的某些衰退有关,即使在没有任何退行性疾病进程的个体中也是如此。功能磁共振成像(fMRI)已被广泛用于将这种与年龄相关的认知衰退与大脑功能改变模式联系起来。fMRI文献中的一个一致发现是,健康的老年人在执行认知任务时,某些脑区的活动水平较高。这一发现通常被解释为一种补偿机制。最近的研究方法主要集中在对功能连接性的研究上,主要来自静息态fMRI,并得出结论认为,较高的活动水平与连接性中断并存。在这篇综述中,我们旨在对HA背景下功能性脑连接的有用性和解释进行最新描述。我们首先给出一个背景,包括一些关于功能连接性的基本方面和方法学问题。我们总结了从任务活动研究中得出的主要发现和认知模型,然后回顾了HA中静息态功能连接性提供的发现。最后,我们提出了该研究领域未来的一些方向。纳入研究的一个共同发现是,与年轻人相比,老年受试者的功能连接性降低。这种连接性降低影响主要脑网络,并解释了与年龄相关的认知改变。值得注意的是,默认模式网络在HA中似乎是一个高度受损的系统。总体而言,活动和连接性研究给出的情况还表明,任务期间的变化轨迹可能与静息态期间观察到的不同。我们建议使用研究有效连接性的复杂建模方法可能有助于理解衰老过程中依赖于上下文的功能重组。