Publications by authors named "Charles S Decarli"

Article Synopsis
  • Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is a risk factor for stroke and Alzheimer’s disease, particularly among Hispanic/Latino adults, highlighting the need for research on its impact on brain health in this demographic.
  • This study, based on the Hispanic Community Health Study, analyzed the association between SDB and brain MRI measures in a diverse group of Hispanic/Latino adults, using data from 2,667 participants with neuroimaging conducted about 10 years after initial sleep assessments.
  • Results indicated that higher respiratory event index (REI) correlated with larger hippocampal volumes, while lower oxygen levels during sleep were related to expanded white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volumes, suggesting complex relationships between SDB, oxygen
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Introduction: Placental growth factor (PlGF) may regulate cerebrovascular permeability. We hypothesized that white matter interstitial fluid accumulation, estimated via magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) free water (FW), would explain the associations between elevated PlGF, white matter hyperintensities (WMH), and cognitive impairment.

Methods: MarkVCID consortium participants ≥55 years old with plasma PlGF and brain MRI were included.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study explored the connection between blood pressure variability (BPV) and cognitive function in older adults, particularly focusing on those over 65 years old.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 4,770 participants from the Chicago Health and Aging Project, measuring blood pressure every three years and assessing cognitive abilities through standardized tests.
  • Results indicated that higher BPV was linked to lower cognitive scores, especially among older Black adults, suggesting that fluctuations in blood pressure could contribute to cognitive decline as people age.
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Article Synopsis
  • - Individuals with subjective memory complaints (SMCs) have higher levels of neurodegeneration biomarkers like neurofilament light chain (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), indicating increased neurodegenerative processes.
  • - The study involved 1,096 older adults and found that those with more memory complaints experienced a 12% increase in NfL and a 9.4% increase in GFAP compared to those with fewer complaints.
  • - Participants reporting more memory issues also showed a faster cognitive decline, suggesting that SMCs could help identify individuals at higher risk for neurodegenerative conditions.
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Objective: Subclinical vascular brain injury is an increasingly recognized risk factor for stroke and dementia. Despite well-established sex differences in vascular risk and disease prevalence, the impact of sex on drivers of subclinical vascular brain injury remains unclear, presenting a barrier to developing sex-specific prevention guidelines. We aimed to establish the extent to which sex moderates associations between vascular risk factors and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures of subclinical brain injury in stroke-free older adults.

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Introduction: Understanding early neuropathological changes and their associations with cognition may aid dementia prevention. This study investigated associations of cerebral amyloid and tau positron emission tomography (PET) retention with cognition in a predominately middle-aged community-based cohort and examined factors that may modify these relationships.

Methods: C-Pittsburgh compound B amyloid and F-flortaucipir tau PET imaging were performed.

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Background: Higher midlife physical activity engagement has been associated with lower dementia risk in late life. However, the underlying mechanisms contributing to the protective effect remain unclear.

Objective: The goal of the current study was to evaluate the associations of physical activity with cerebral amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau in a predominately middle-aged community-based cohort, as well as to explore whether the associations differ by sex or age.

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Background And Objectives: Amyloid pathology, vascular disease pathology, and pathologies affecting the medial temporal lobe are associated with cognitive trajectories in older adults. However, only limited evidence exists on how these pathologies influence cognition in the oldest old. We evaluated whether amyloid burden, white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volume, and hippocampal volume (HV) are associated with cognitive level and decline in the oldest old.

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Background: Kinetic modeling of F-florbetaben provides important quantification of brain amyloid deposition in research and clinical settings but its use is limited by the requirement of arterial blood data for quantitative PET. The total-body EXPLORER PET scanner supports the dynamic acquisition of a full human body simultaneously and permits noninvasive image-derived input functions (IDIFs) as an alternative to arterial blood sampling. This study quantified brain amyloid burden with kinetic modeling, leveraging dynamic F-florbetaben PET in aorta IDIFs and the brain in an elderly cohort.

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Background And Objectives: Higher YKL-40 levels in the CSF are a known biomarker of brain inflammation. We explored the utility of plasma YKL-40 as a biomarker for accelerated brain aging and dementia risk.

Methods: We performed cross-sectional and prospective analyses of 4 community-based cohorts in the United States or Europe: the Age, Gene/Environment Susceptibility-Reykjavik Study, Atherosclerosis Risk in the Communities study, Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study, and Framingham Heart Study (FHS).

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Purpose: Kinetic modeling of F-florbetaben provides important quantification of brain amyloid deposition in research and clinical settings but its use is limited by the requirement of arterial blood data for quantitative PET. The total-body EXPLORER PET scanner supports the dynamic acquisition of a full human body simultaneously and permits noninvasive image-derived input functions (IDIFs) as an alternative to arterial blood sampling. This study quantified brain amyloid burden with kinetic modeling, leveraging dynamic F-florbetaben PET in aorta IDIFs and the brain in an elderly cohort.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to analyze the relationship between self-reported sleep duration and neuroimaging markers related to Alzheimer's disease, focusing on amyloid, tau, neurodegeneration, and vascular factors.
  • It utilized data from participants in the Framingham Heart Study who underwent various imaging tests, assessing their sleep duration categorized into short, average, and long at two different times: at the testing point and approximately 13 years prior.
  • The results indicated no significant direct link between sleep duration and neuroimaging measures; however, long-term changes to longer sleep duration were associated with increased brain damage markers, while consistently long sleepers showed lower levels of brain damage compared to those with average sleep duration.
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Background: Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) involve biological processes that begin years to decades before onset of clinical symptoms. The plasma proteome can offer insight into brain aging and risk of incident dementia among cognitively healthy adults.

Objective: To identify biomarkers and biological pathways associated with neuroimaging measures and incident dementia in two large community-based cohorts by applying a correlation-based network analysis to the plasma proteome.

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Background: Insulin resistance (IR) is a major risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD) dementia. The mechanisms by which IR predisposes to AD are not well-understood. Epigenetic studies may help identify molecular signatures of IR associated with AD, thus improving our understanding of the biological and regulatory mechanisms linking IR and AD.

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Background: White matter hyperintensities (WMH) that occur in the setting of vascular cognitive impairment and dementia (VCID) may be dynamic increasing or decreasing volumes or stable over time. Quantifying such changes may prove useful as a biomarker for clinical trials designed to address vascular cognitive-impairment and dementia and Alzheimer's Disease.

Objective: Conducting multi-site cross-site inter-rater and test-retest reliability of the MarkVCID white matter hyperintensity growth and regression protocol.

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Introduction: The timing of educational attainment may modify its effects on late-life cognition, yet most studies evaluate education only at a single time point.

Methods: Kaiser Healthy Aging and Diverse Life Experiences (KHANDLE) Study cohort participants (N = 554) reported educational attainment (dichotomized at any college education) at two time points, and we classified them as having low, high, or later-life high educational attainment. Linear mixed-effects models estimated associations between educational attainment change groups and domain-specific cognitive outcomes (z-standardized).

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Introduction: Polygenic Risk Scores (PRSs) are summaries of genetic risk alleles for an outcome.

Methods: We used summary statistics from five GWASs of AD to construct PRSs in 4,189 diverse Hispanics/Latinos (mean age 63 years) from the Study of Latinos-Investigation of Neurocognitive Aging (SOL-INCA). We assessed the PRS associations with MCI in the combined set of people and in diverse subgroups, and when including and excluding the APOE gene region.

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Large-scale data obtained from aggregation of already collected multi-site neuroimaging datasets has brought benefits such as higher statistical power, reliability, and robustness to the studies. Despite these promises from growth in sample size, substantial technical variability stemming from differences in scanner specifications exists in the aggregated data and could inadvertently bias any downstream analyses on it. Such a challenge calls for data normalization and/or harmonization frameworks, in addition to comprehensive criteria to estimate the scanner-related variability and evaluate the harmonization frameworks.

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Introduction: The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of cardiovascular health (CVH) with cognitive outcomes, including incident Alzheimer's dementia, rate of cognitive decline, and measures of brain injury and structure.

Methods: This study consisted of 1702 Black or African American and White participants living in the south side of Chicago, Illinois, and enrolled in the Chicago Health and Aging Project, a population-based cohort since 1993. CVH was based on seven risk factors, including diet, physical activity, body mass index, smoking, dyslipidemia, hypertension, and diabetes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Previous research indicates a link between lower mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number and neurodegenerative diseases, prompting investigation into the relationship between mtDNA CN in blood and Alzheimer disease endophenotypes.
  • The study involved dementia-free individuals from various community cohorts, measuring mtDNA CN and analyzing its association with cognitive function and brain MRI markers over specified timeframes.
  • Findings showed that higher mtDNA CN correlates with better cognitive performance, independent of several confounding factors, with consistent results observed in both cross-sectional and prospective analyses, although the latter showed a weaker association.
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Article Synopsis
  • Myelin injury may lead to cholesterol release and dysmetabolism, contributing to the buildup of Abeta and amyloid plaques, which in turn further damages myelin, creating a damaging cycle that worsens Alzheimer's disease (AD) symptoms.
  • The amyloid cascade hypothesis has been the primary focus for understanding AD, but recent clinical trials have raised questions about whether amyloid buildup is a cause or consequence of the disease, particularly with the significant role of the APOE4 allele in cholesterol transport and AD risk.
  • White matter injury is a common feature in AD brains and appears to precede the formation of amyloid plaques, suggesting that targeting white matter health could improve cognitive function in AD without directly affecting amyloid-related pathology.
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Dual cognitive and mobility impairments are associated with an increased risk of dementia. Recent studies examining temporal trajectories of mobility and cognitive function in aging found that dual decline is associated with higher dementia risk than memory decline or gait decline only. Although initial data show that individuals with dual decline or impairment have excessive cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors, the causes of dual decline or what underlies dual decline with a high risk of dementia remain largely unknown.

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Background And Objectives: Recent studies suggest the utility of blood biomarkers in detecting changes in neurodegenerative disorders. The objective of our research was to test the hypothesis that the longitudinal changes in total tau (t-tau), neurofilament light chain (Nf-L), and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) are associated with structural MRI and the development of clinical Alzheimer disease (AD) and cognitive decline.

Methods: Data came from a population-based sample with serum concentrations of t-tau, Nf-L, and GFAP and cognitive characteristics measured over 17 years.

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Background: Previous studies suggest poor pulmonary function is associated with increased burden of cerebral white matter hyperintensities and brain atrophy among elderly individuals, but the results are inconsistent.

Objective: To study the cross-sectional associations of pulmonary function with structural brain variables.

Methods: Data from six large community-based samples (N = 11,091) were analyzed.

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Background And Objectives: Diet may be a key contributor to brain health in midlife. In particular, omega-3 fatty acids have been related to better neurologic outcomes in older adults. However, studies focusing on midlife are lacking.

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