医学
生命银行
静息状态功能磁共振成像
队列
功能连接
队列研究
纵向研究
物理医学与康复
老年学
内科学
神经科学
生物信息学
病理
放射科
生物
作者
Anton Orlichenko,Kuan‐Jui Su,Hui Shen,Hong‐Wen Deng,Yu‐Ping Wang
标识
DOI:10.1117/1.jmi.11.2.024010
摘要
PurposeFunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and functional connectivity (FC) have been used to follow aging in both children and older adults. Robust changes have been observed in children, in which high connectivity among all brain regions changes to a more modular structure with maturation. We examine FC changes in older adults after 2 years of aging in the UK Biobank (UKB) longitudinal cohort.ApproachWe process fMRI connectivity data using the Power264 atlas and then test whether the average internetwork FC changes in the 2722-subject longitudinal cohort are statistically significant using a Bonferroni-corrected t-test. We also compare the ability of Power264 and UKB-provided, independent component analysis (ICA)-based FC to determine which of a longitudinal scan pair is older. Finally, we investigate cross-sectional FC changes as well as differences due to differing scanner tasks in the UKB, Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort, and Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative datasets.ResultsWe find a 6.8% average increase in somatomotor network (SMT)–visual network (VIS) connectivity from younger to older scans (corrected p<10−15) that occurs in male, female, older subject (>65 years old), and younger subject (<55 years old) groups. Among all internetwork connections, the average SMT–VIS connectivity is the best predictor of relative scan age. Using the full FC and a training set of 2000 subjects, one is able to predict which scan is older 82.5% of the time using either the full Power264 FC or the UKB-provided ICA-based FC.ConclusionsWe conclude that SMT–VIS connectivity increases with age in the UKB longitudinal cohort and that resting state FC increases with age in the UKB cross-sectional cohort.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI