AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how aging affects cerebral blood flow (CBF) in older adults by investigating changes in brain structure and partial volume effects due to brain atrophy.
  • Findings show that while there is a general decline in global gray-matter CBF as people age, some specific brain regions may actually experience increases in CBF after correcting for partial volume effects.
  • The results highlight that although age-related reductions in CBF are evident, regional differences in blood flow are more accurately captured when accounting for partial volume effects in brain imaging.

Article Abstract

Purpose: One possible contributing factor for cerebral blood flow (CBF) decline in normal aging is the increase in partial volume effects due to brain atrophy, as cortical thinning can exacerbate the contamination of gray-matter (GM) voxels by other tissue types. This work investigates CBF changes in normal aging of a large elderly cohort aged 54 to 84 and how correction for partial volume effects that would accommodate potential changes in GM might affect this.

Methods: The study cohort consisted of 474 participants aged 54 to 84 years using pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling MRI. A volumetric pipeline and a surface-based pipeline were applied to measure global and regional perfusion. Volumetric regions of interest (ROIs) included GM, cerebral white matter, vascular territories, and the brain atlas from the UK Biobank. The cortical parcellation was using Desikan-Killiany atlas. Non-partial volume effect correction (PVEc) and PVEc GM-CBF changes with aging were modeled using linear regressions.

Results: Global GM CBF decreased by 0.17 mL/100 g/min per year with aging before PVEc (p < 0.05) and was 0.18 mL/100 g/min after PVEc (p < 0.05). All cortical parcels exhibited CBF decreases with age before PVEc. After PVEc, seven parcels retained decreasing trends. However, GM CBF demonstrated increase with age after PVEc in three parcels.

Conclusion: Although decreases in global perfusion are observed with aging before PVEc, perfusion variations appear to be more regionally selective after PVEc. This supports the understanding that variation in cerebral perfusion with age observed with imaging is influenced by regional changes in anatomy that can be accommodated with PVEc, but perfusion variation is still observable even after PVE is accounted for.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.30376DOI Listing

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