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Faster Brain Atrophy Linked to MCI

ByRomeo Minalane

Nov 13, 2024
Faster Brain Atrophy Linked to MCI

A long-term brain imaging study in aging adults showed faster rates of atrophy in certain brain structures to be associated with the risk of developing mild cognitive impairment (MCI).

While some brain atrophy is expected in aging, high levels of atrophy in the white matter and high enlargement in the ventricles are associated with earlier progression from normal cognition to MCI, the study found. The researchers also identified diabetes and atypical levels of amyloid beta protein in the cerebrospinal fluid as risk factors for brain atrophy and MCI.

For their research, published online on October 30 in JAMA Network Open, Yuto Uchida, MD, PhD, and his colleagues at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore looked at data for 185 individuals (mean age, 55.4 years; 63% women) who were cognitively normal at baseline and followed for a median of 20 years.

All had been enrolled in a longitudinal cohort study on biomarkers of cognitive decline conducted at Johns Hopkins. Each participant underwent a median of five structural MRI studies during the follow-up period as well as annual cognitive testing. Altogether 60 individuals developed MCI, with eight of them progressing to dementia.

“We hypothesized that annual rates of change of segmental brain volumes would be associated with vascular risk factors among middle-aged and older adults and that these trends would be associated with the progression from normal cognition to MCI,” Uchida and his colleagues wrote.

Uniquely Long Follow-Up

Most longitudinal studies using structural MRI count

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