Kotkowski Eithan, Price Larry R, DeFronzo Ralph A, Franklin Crystal G, Salazar Maximino, Garrett Amy S, Woolsey Mary, Blangero John, Duggirala Ravindranath, Glahn David C, Fox Peter T
Research Imaging Institute, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.
Departments of Mathematics and Education, Texas State University, San Marcos, TX, United States.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2022 Sep 20;14:999288. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.999288. eCollection 2022.
This project aimed to investigate the association between biometric components of metabolic syndrome (MetS) with gray matter volume (GMV) obtained with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from a large cohort of community-based adults ( = 776) subdivided by age and sex and employing brain regions of interest defined previously as the "Neural Signature of MetS" (NS-MetS).
Lipid profiles, biometrics, and regional brain GMV were obtained from the Genetics of Brain Structure (GOBS) image archive. Participants underwent T1-weighted MR imaging. MetS components (waist circumference, fasting plasma glucose, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, and blood pressure) were defined using the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III. Subjects were grouped by age: early adult (18-25 years), young adult (26-45 years), and middle-aged adult (46-65 years). Linear regression modeling was used to investigate associations between MetS components and GMV in five brain regions comprising the NS-MetS: cerebellum, brainstem, orbitofrontal cortex, right insular/limbic cluster and caudate.
In both men and women of each age group, waist circumference was the single component most strongly correlated with decreased GMV across all NS-MetS regions. The brain region most strongly correlated to all MetS components was the posterior cerebellum.
The posterior cerebellum emerged as the region most significantly associated with MetS individual components, as the only region to show decreased GMV in young adults, and the region with the greatest variance between men and women. We propose that future studies investigating neurological effects of MetS and its comorbidities-namely diabetes and obesity-should consider the NS-MetS and the differential effects of age and sex.
本项目旨在研究代谢综合征(MetS)的生物特征成分与通过磁共振成像(MRI)获得的灰质体积(GMV)之间的关联,该研究对象为一大群社区成年人(n = 776),按年龄和性别细分,并采用先前定义为“代谢综合征的神经特征”(NS-MetS)的感兴趣脑区。
从脑结构遗传学(GOBS)图像存档中获取血脂谱、生物特征数据和脑区GMV。参与者接受了T1加权磁共振成像。使用美国国家胆固醇教育计划成人治疗小组第三次报告定义代谢综合征成分(腰围、空腹血糖、甘油三酯、高密度脂蛋白胆固醇和血压)。受试者按年龄分组:青年成年人(18 - 25岁)、年轻成年人(26 - 45岁)和中年成年人(46 - 65岁)。采用线性回归模型研究代谢综合征成分与NS-MetS包含的五个脑区(小脑、脑干、眶额皮质、右侧岛叶/边缘叶簇和尾状核)的GMV之间的关联。
在每个年龄组的男性和女性中,腰围是所有NS-MetS区域中与GMV降低相关性最强的单一成分。与所有代谢综合征成分相关性最强的脑区是小脑后部。
小脑后部是与代谢综合征各个成分最显著相关的区域,是年轻成年人中唯一显示GMV降低的区域,也是男性和女性之间差异最大的区域。我们建议,未来研究代谢综合征及其合并症(即糖尿病和肥胖症)的神经学影响时,应考虑NS-MetS以及年龄和性别的差异影响。