Title
Intrinsic Brain Activity Of Cognitively Normal Older Persons Resembles More That Of Patients Both With And At Risk For Alzheimer'S Disease Than That Of Healthy Younger Persons
Abstract
In Alzheimer's disease (AD), recent findings suggest that amyloid-fl (A/1)-pathology might start 20-30 years before first cognitive symptoms arise. To account for age as most relevant risk factor for sporadic AD, it has been hypothesized that lifespan intrinsic (i.e., ongoing) activity of hetero-modal brain areas with highest levels of functional connectivity triggers A beta-pathology. This model induces the simple question whether in older persons without any cognitive symptoms intrinsic activity of hetero-modal areas is more similar to that of symptomatic patients with AD or to that of younger healthy persons. We hypothesize that due to advanced age and therefore potential impact of pre-clinical AD, intrinsic activity of older persons resembles more that of patients than that of younger controls. We tested this hypothesis in younger (ca. 25 years) and older healthy persons (ca. 70 years) and patients with mild cognitive impairment and AD-dementia (ca. 70 years) by the use of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging, distinct measures of intrinsic brain activity, and different hierarchical clustering approaches. Independently of applied methods and involved areas, healthy older persons' intrinsic brain activity was consistently more alike that of patients than that of younger controls. Our result provides evidence for larger similarity in intrinsic brain activity between healthy older persons and patients with or at-risk for AD than between older and younger ones, suggesting a significant proportion of pre-clinical AD cases in the group of cognitively normal older people. The observed link of aging and AD with intrinsic brain activity supports the view that lifespan intrinsic activity may contribute critically to the pathogenesis of AD.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1089/brain.2013.0213
BRAIN CONNECTIVITY
Keywords
DocType
Volume
aging, Alzheimer's disease, functional connectivity, hierarchical clustering, intrinsic brain activity, mild cognitive impairment, resting-state functional MRI
Journal
4
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
5
2158-0014
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.35
3
12