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Prefrontal vulnerabilities and whole brain connectivity in aging and depression

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posted on 2014-01-09, 00:00 authored by Melissa Lamar, Rebecca A. Charlton, Olusola A. Ajilore, Aifeng Zhang, Shaolin Yang, Thomas R. Barrick, Emma Rhodes, Anand Kumar
Studies exploring the underpinnings of age-related neurodegeneration suggest fronto-limbic alterations that are increasingly vulnerable in the presence of disease including late life depression. Less work has assessed the impact of this specific vulnerability on widespread brain circuitry. Seventy-nine older adults (healthy controls=45; late life depression=34) completed translational tasks shown in non-human primates to rely on fronto-limbic networks involving dorsolateral (Self-Ordered Pointing Task) or orbitofrontal (Object Alternation Task) cortices. A sub-sample of participants also completed diffusion tensor imaging for white matter tract quantification (uncinate and cingulum bundle; n=58) and whole brain tract-based spatial statistics (n=62). Despite task associations to specific white matter tracts across both groups, only healthy controls demonstrated significant correlations between widespread tract integrity and cognition. Thus, increasing Object Alternation Task errors were associated with decreasing fractional anisotropy in the uncinate in late life depression; however, only in healthy controls was the uncinate incorporated into a larger network of white matter vulnerability associating fractional anisotropy with Object Alternation Task errors using whole brain tract-based spatial statistics. It appears that the whole brain impact of specific fronto-limbic vulnerabilities in aging may be eclipsed in the presence of disease-specific neuropathology like that seen in late life depression.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institute on Aging [grant number K01 AG040192- 01A1 to M.L.]; and the National Institute of Mental Health [grant numbers 7RO1 MH073989-04 to A.K., K23 MH011875 to O.A.].

History

Publisher Statement

NOTICE: This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Neuropsychologia. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in Neuropsychologia, Vol 51, Issue 8, 2013 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2013.05.004

Publisher

Elsevier Inc.

Language

  • en_US

issn

0028-3932

Issue date

2013-07-01

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