Regional Brain Changes in Aging Healthy Adults: General Trends, Individual Differences and Modifiers
Wayne State University · Max Planck Institute for Human Development · +7 more institutions
Abstract
Brain aging research relies mostly on cross-sectional studies, which infer true changes from age differences. We present longitudinal measures of five-year change in the regional brain volumes in healthy adults. Average and individual differences in volume changes and the effects of age, sex and hypertension were assessed with latent difference score modeling. The caudate, the cerebellum, the hippocampus and the association cortices shrunk substantially. There was minimal change in the entorhinal and none in the primary visual cortex. Longitudinal measures of shrinkage exceeded cross-sectional estimates. All regions except the inferior parietal lobule showed individual differences in change. Shrinkage of the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.12
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
9- NRNaftali RazCorresponding
Wayne State University
- ULUlman Lindenberger
Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Saarland University, Max Planck Society
- KMKaren M. Rodrigue
Wayne State University
- KMKristen M. Kennedy
Wayne State University
- DHDenise Head
University of Washington, Washington University in St. Louis
Topics & keywords
- Hippocampus
- Inferior parietal lobule
- Entorhinal cortex
- Cerebellum
- Psychology
- Brain size
- Neuroscience
- White matter