Le Floch Maxime, Ali Pauline, Asfar Marine, Sánchez-Rodríguez Dolores, Dinomais Mickaël, Annweiler Cédric
Department of Geriatric Medicine, Angers University Hospital, Angers University Memory Clinic, Research Center on Autonomy and Longevity, University of Angers, Angers, France.
School of Medicine, Faculty of Health, University of Angers, Angers, France.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2021 Mar 10;9:610426. doi: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.610426. eCollection 2021.
Falls are frequent and severe in older adults, especially among those with cognitive impairments due to altered motor control. Which brain areas are affected among fallers remains yet not elucidated. The objective of this cross-sectional analysis was to determine whether the history of falls correlated with focal brain volume reductions in older adults.
Participants from the MERE study ( = 208; mean, 71.9 ± 5.9 years; 43% female; 38% cognitively healthy, 41% with mild cognitive impairment and 21% with dementia) were asked about their history of falls over the preceding year and received a 1.5-Tesla MRI scan of the brain. Cortical gray and white matter subvolumes were automatically segmented using Statistical Parametric Mapping. Age, gender, use of psychoactive drugs, cognitive status, and total intracranial volume were used as covariates.
Fifty-eight participants (28%) reported history of falls. Fallers were older ( = 0.001), used more often psychoactive drugs ( = 0.008) and had more often dementia ( = 0.004) compared to non-fallers. After adjustment, we found correlations between the history of falls and brain subvolumes; fallers exhibiting larger gray matter subvolumes in striatum, principally in bilateral caudate nucleus, than non-fallers. By stratifying on cognitive status, these neuroanatomical correlates were retrieved only in participants with MCI or dementia. There were no correlations with the subvolumes of white matter.
Older fallers had larger subvolumes in bilateral striatum than non-fallers, principally within the caudate nucleus. This suggests a possible brain adaptative mechanism of falls in people with neurocognitive decline.
老年人跌倒频繁且严重,尤其是在那些因运动控制改变而患有认知障碍的人群中。跌倒者的哪些脑区受到影响仍未阐明。本横断面分析的目的是确定跌倒史是否与老年人局部脑容量减少相关。
询问了MERE研究的参与者(n = 208;平均年龄71.9 ± 5.9岁;43%为女性;38%认知健康,41%有轻度认知障碍,21%患有痴呆症)他们上一年的跌倒史,并对其进行了1.5特斯拉的脑部MRI扫描。使用统计参数映射自动分割皮质灰质和白质亚体积。将年龄、性别、精神活性药物的使用、认知状态和总颅内体积用作协变量。
58名参与者(28%)报告有跌倒史。与未跌倒者相比,跌倒者年龄更大(P = 0.001),更常使用精神活性药物(P = 0.008),且更常患有痴呆症(P = 0.004)。调整后,我们发现跌倒史与脑亚体积之间存在相关性;跌倒者纹状体中的灰质亚体积比未跌倒者更大,主要是双侧尾状核。通过对认知状态进行分层,仅在患有轻度认知障碍或痴呆症的参与者中发现了这些神经解剖学相关性。与白质亚体积无相关性。
老年跌倒者双侧纹状体的亚体积比未跌倒者更大,主要在尾状核内。这表明神经认知功能下降人群跌倒可能存在一种脑适应性机制。