Sundermann Erin E, Biegon Anat, Rubin Leah H, Lipton Richard B, Mowrey Wenzhu, Landau Susan, Maki Pauline M
From the Einstein Aging Study and the Department of Neurology (E.E.S., R.B.L.) and the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health (W.M.), Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx; Department of Neurology (A.B.), State University of New York, Stony Brook; Department of Psychiatry (L.H.R., P.M.M.), University of Illinois at Chicago; and Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute (S.L.), University of California, Berkeley.
Neurology. 2016 Apr 12;86(15):1368-1376. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000002570. Epub 2016 Mar 16.
To examine sex differences in the relationship between clinical symptoms related to Alzheimer disease (AD) (verbal memory deficits) and neurodegeneration (hippocampal volume/intracranial volume ratio [HpVR]) across AD stages.
The sample included 379 healthy participants, 694 participants with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI), and 235 participants with AD and dementia from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative who completed the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT). Cross-sectional analyses were conducted using linear regression to examine the interaction between sex and HpVR on RAVLT across and within diagnostic groups adjusting for age, education, and APOE ε4 status.
Across groups, there were significant sex × HpVR interactions for immediate and delayed recall (p < 0.01). Women outperformed men among individuals with moderate to larger HpVR, but not among individuals with smaller HpVR. In diagnosis-stratified analyses, the HpVR × sex interaction was significant in the aMCI group, but not in the control or AD dementia groups, for immediate and delayed recall (p < 0.01). Among controls, women outperformed men on both outcomes irrespective of HpVR (p < 0.001). In AD dementia, better RAVLT performance was independently associated with female sex (immediate, p = 0.04) and larger HpVR (delayed, p = 0.001).
Women showed an advantage in verbal memory despite evidence of moderate hippocampal atrophy. This advantage may represent a sex-specific form of cognitive reserve delaying verbal memory decline until more advanced disease stages.
研究阿尔茨海默病(AD)相关临床症状(言语记忆缺陷)与神经退行性变(海马体积/颅内体积比[HpVR])在AD各阶段关系中的性别差异。
样本包括来自阿尔茨海默病神经影像倡议组织的379名健康参与者、694名遗忘型轻度认知障碍(aMCI)参与者以及235名患有AD和痴呆症的参与者,他们均完成了雷伊听觉词语学习测验(RAVLT)。采用线性回归进行横断面分析,以检验性别与HpVR在各诊断组内及组间对RAVLT的交互作用,并对年龄、教育程度和APOE ε4状态进行校正。
在所有组中,即时回忆和延迟回忆的性别×HpVR交互作用均显著(p<0.01)。在HpVR中等至较大的个体中,女性表现优于男性,但在HpVR较小的个体中并非如此。在诊断分层分析中,对于即时回忆和延迟回忆,aMCI组中HpVR×性别交互作用显著(p<0.01),而在对照组或AD痴呆组中不显著。在对照组中,无论HpVR如何,女性在两项指标上均表现优于男性(p<0.001)。在AD痴呆组中,RAVLT表现较好与女性性别(即时回忆,p = 0.04)和较大的HpVR(延迟回忆,p = 0.001)独立相关。
尽管有中度海马萎缩的证据,但女性在言语记忆方面表现出优势。这种优势可能代表了一种性别特异性的认知储备形式,可将言语记忆衰退延迟至疾病更晚期阶段。