Title Neurometabolic correlates of posturography in normal aging and older adults with mild cognitive impairment: evidence from 1H-MRS study /
Authors Levin, Oron ; Vints, Wouter A.J ; Ziv, Gal ; Katkutė, Gintarė ; Kušleikienė, Simona ; Valatkevičienė, Kristina ; Sheoran, Samrat ; Drozdova-Statkevičienė, Margarita ; Gleiznienė, Rymantė ; Pääsuke, Mati ; Dudonienė, Vilma ; Himmelreich, Uwe ; Česnaitienė, Vida J ; Masiulis, Nerijus
DOI 10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103304
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Is Part of NeuroImage: clinical.. Oxford : Elsevier BV. 2023, vol. 37, art. no. 103304, p. 1-11.. ISSN 2213-1582
Keywords [eng] aging ; balance control ; brain neurometabolites ; dual-task effect ; postural stability
Abstract [eng] Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) holds promise for revealing and understanding neurodegenerative processes associated with cognitive and functional impairments in aging. In the present study, we examined the neurometabolic correlates of balance performance in 42 cognitively intact older adults (healthy controls - HC) and 26 older individuals that were diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Neurometabolite ratios of total N-acetyl aspartate (tNAA), glutamate-glutamine complex (Glx), total choline (tCho) and myo-inositol (mIns) relative to total creatine (tCr) were assessed using single voxel 1H-MRS in four different brain regions. Regions of interest were the left hippocampus (HPC), dorsal posterior cingulate cortex (dPCC), left sensorimotor cortex (SM1), and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC). Center-of-pressure velocity (Vcop) and dual task effect (DTE) were used as measures of balance performance. Results indicated no significant group differences in neurometabolite ratios and balance performance measures. However, our observations revealed that higher tCho/tCr and mIns/tCr in hippocampus and dPCC were generic predictors of worse balance performance, suggesting that neuroinflammatory processes in these regions might be a driving factor for impaired balance performance in aging. Further, we found that higher tNAA/tCr and mIns/tCr and lower Glx/tCr in left SM1 were predictors of better balance performance in MCI but not in HC. The latter observation hints at the possibility that individuals with MCI may upregulate balance control through recruitment of sensorimotor pathways.
Published Oxford : Elsevier BV
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2023
CC license CC license description