灰色(单位)
白色(突变)
心理学
联想(心理学)
部分各向异性
灰质
人口学
作者
Quan Wang,Ning Su,Jin Huang,Xinyu Liang,Jing Yuan,Ming Yao,Li-Xin Zhou,Zhengyu Jin,Shuyang Zhang,Liying Cui,Gaolang Gong,Feng Tian,Yi-Cheng Zhu,Jun Ni
摘要
Background Few studies have investigated the association between cognition and brain volume associated with cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD). Objective We investigated the association between cognition and brain volume and neuroimaging markers of CSVD in a community-dwelling population. Methods Participants (n = 993, age≥35 years) from the community-based Shunyi Study were included to investigate the association between neuroimaging markers and cognition cross-sectionally. Magnetic resonance imaging markers included brain volume measurements of the total cerebrum, white matter, gray matter, and CSVD imaging markers. Cognitive performance was assessed using neuropsychological tests of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), Fuld Object Memory, digit span, Trail Making Test (TMT)-A, and TMT-B. Results For brain volume measurement, subcortical white matter fraction was positively associated with MMSE score (β= 0.034, p = 0.0062) and MoCA score (β= 0.034, p = 0.0174), and negatively associated with TMT-A and TMT-B completion time (β= -2.319, p = 0.0002; β= -2.827, p = 0.0073, respectively). For evaluation of CSVD imaging markers, the presence of lacunes was positively associated with TMT-B completion time (β= 17.241, p = 0.0028). Conclusion In community-dwelling populations, reduced white matter volumes, as a consequence of aging and vascular damage, are associated with worse global cognition and executive function. Our findings provide potential insights into the correlation between cognition and CSVD-associated subcortical white matter injury.
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