AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how cardiovascular risk factors like high blood pressure and low fitness affect brain activity during task-switching in older adults, as previous research on this topic is limited.
  • It finds that both low physical fitness and low arterial plasticity independently reduce brain activity in certain areas, and their combined effects are even more significant.
  • The research also reveals that older adults with lower fitness levels show excessive activation in the frontal cortex, which may hinder their task performance and contribute to age-related changes in brain function.

Article Abstract

Not only are the effects of cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood pressure and low fitness on executive functions and brain activations in older adults scarcely investigated, no fMRI study has investigated the combined effects of multiple risk factors on brain activations in older adults. This fMRI study examined the independent and combined effects of two cardiovascular risk factors, arterial plasticity, and physical fitness, on brain activations during task-switching in older adults. The effects of these two risk factors on age-related differences in activation between older and younger adults were also examined. Independently, low physical fitness and low arterial plasticity were related to reduced suppressions of occipital brain regions. The combined effects of these two risks on occipital regions were greater than the independent effects of either risk factor. Age-related overactivations in frontal cortex were observed in low fitness older adults. Brain-behavior correlation indicates that these frontal overactivations are maladaptive to older adults' task performance. It is possible that the resulting effects of cardiovascular risks on the aging brain, especially the maladaptive overactivations of frontal brain regions by high risk older adults, contribute to often found posterior-anterior shift in aging (PASA) brain activations. Furthermore, observed age-related differences in brain activations during task-switching can be partially attributed to individual differences in cardiovascular risks among older adults.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7509111PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2020.561877DOI Listing

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