AI Article Synopsis

  • - Past research indicates that brain atrophy can increase following surgery, and inflammation may play a role in neurodegeneration.
  • - The study analyzed data from older patients undergoing major surgery to see how changes in interleukin (IL) levels before and after surgery relate to atrophy in the Nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM), impacting cognitive outcomes.
  • - Findings revealed significant links between elevated postoperative IL8 and IL18 levels and increased NBM atrophy after three months, while overall NBM volume positively correlated with cognitive performance but not short-term cognitive changes post-surgery.

Article Abstract

Past studies have observed that brain atrophy may accelerate after surgical procedures. Furthermore, an association of systemic inflammation with neurodegeneration has been described. We hypothesize that postoperative interleukin (IL) levels in circulation as well as the perioperative change in interleukin levels are associated with increased postoperative atrophy in the Nucleus basalis magnocellularis (of Meynert, NBM) which is the major source of cortical acetylcholine. We analyzed data from the BioCog cohort which included patients ≥ 65 years presenting for elective major surgery (≥ 60min). Blood samples were taken before surgery and on the first postoperative day. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and neuropsychological assessments were conducted before surgery and after three months follow-up. We used linear regression analysis to determine the association of three interleukins (IL6, IL8 and IL18) with NBM atrophy (in % volume change from baseline before surgery to follow-up), as well as to examine the associations of NBM atrophy and volume with postoperative cognitive ability and perioperative cognitive change. Receiver-operating curves were used to determine the prognostic value of preoperative interleukin levels. For IL8 (N = 97) and IL18 (N = 217), but not IL6 (N = 240), we observed significant associations of higher postoperative IL levels at the first postoperative day with higher NBM atrophy at three months after surgery. Subsequent analyses suggested that in both IL8 and IL18, this association was driven by a more general association of chronically elevated IL levels and NBM atrophy, reflected by preoperative IL concentrations, rather than IL response to surgery, measured as the difference between pre- and postoperative IL concentrations. At follow-up, NBM volume was positively associated with the level of cognitive performance, but NBM atrophy was not significantly related to perioperative cognitive change. Prognostic value of preoperative IL concentrations for NBM atrophy was low. Our results suggest that an association of postoperative interleukin levels with NBM atrophy is driven by preoperatively elevated interleukins due to pre-existing inflammation, rather than perioperative change in interleukin levels in response to surgery and anesthesia. The BioCog study has been registered at clinicaltrials.gov on Oct 15, 2014 (NCT02265263).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10940494PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11481-024-10110-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nbm atrophy
28
interleukin levels
16
il8 il18
12
three months
12
atrophy
10
nbm
9
nucleus basalis
8
basalis magnocellularis
8
atrophy three
8
surgery
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!