An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.

Understanding how vascular and metabolic factors impact on cognitive function is essential to develop efficient therapies to prevent and treat cognitive losses in older age. Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2), cerebral blood flow (CBF) and venous oxygenation (Yv) comprise key physiologic proc...

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Main Authors: Sarah J Catchlove, Helen Macpherson, Matthew E Hughes, Yufen Chen, Todd B Parrish, Andrew Pipingas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5963791?pdf=render
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author Sarah J Catchlove
Helen Macpherson
Matthew E Hughes
Yufen Chen
Todd B Parrish
Andrew Pipingas
author_facet Sarah J Catchlove
Helen Macpherson
Matthew E Hughes
Yufen Chen
Todd B Parrish
Andrew Pipingas
author_sort Sarah J Catchlove
collection DOAJ
description Understanding how vascular and metabolic factors impact on cognitive function is essential to develop efficient therapies to prevent and treat cognitive losses in older age. Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2), cerebral blood flow (CBF) and venous oxygenation (Yv) comprise key physiologic processes that maintain optimum functioning of neural activity. Changes to these parameters across the lifespan may precede neurodegeneration and contribute to age-related cognitive decline. This study examined differences in blood flow and metabolism between 31 healthy younger (<50 years) and 29 healthy older (>50 years) adults; and investigated whether these parameters contribute to cognitive performance.Participants underwent a cognitive assessment and MRI scan. Grey matter CMRO2 was calculated from measures of CBF (phase contrast MRI), arterial and venous oxygenation (TRUST MRI) to assess group differences in physiological function and the contribution of these parameters to cognition.Performance on memory (p<0.001) and attention tasks (p<0.001) and total CBF were reduced (p<0.05), and Yv trended toward a decrease (p = .06) in the older group, while grey matter CBF and CMRO2 did not differ between the age groups. Attention was negatively associated with CBF when adjusted (p<0.05) in the older adults, but not in the younger group. There was no such relationship with memory. Neither cognitive measure was associated with oxygen metabolism or venous oxygenation in either age group.Findings indicated an age-related imbalance between oxygen delivery, consumption and demand, evidenced by a decreased supply of oxygen with unchanged metabolism resulting in increased oxygen extraction. CBF predicted attention when the age-effect was controlled, suggesting a task- specific CBF- cognition relationship.
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spelling doaj.art-99dfa284da644d80a0f6f8f1e8aff4fc2022-12-22T03:11:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01135e019705510.1371/journal.pone.0197055An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.Sarah J CatchloveHelen MacphersonMatthew E HughesYufen ChenTodd B ParrishAndrew PipingasUnderstanding how vascular and metabolic factors impact on cognitive function is essential to develop efficient therapies to prevent and treat cognitive losses in older age. Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2), cerebral blood flow (CBF) and venous oxygenation (Yv) comprise key physiologic processes that maintain optimum functioning of neural activity. Changes to these parameters across the lifespan may precede neurodegeneration and contribute to age-related cognitive decline. This study examined differences in blood flow and metabolism between 31 healthy younger (<50 years) and 29 healthy older (>50 years) adults; and investigated whether these parameters contribute to cognitive performance.Participants underwent a cognitive assessment and MRI scan. Grey matter CMRO2 was calculated from measures of CBF (phase contrast MRI), arterial and venous oxygenation (TRUST MRI) to assess group differences in physiological function and the contribution of these parameters to cognition.Performance on memory (p<0.001) and attention tasks (p<0.001) and total CBF were reduced (p<0.05), and Yv trended toward a decrease (p = .06) in the older group, while grey matter CBF and CMRO2 did not differ between the age groups. Attention was negatively associated with CBF when adjusted (p<0.05) in the older adults, but not in the younger group. There was no such relationship with memory. Neither cognitive measure was associated with oxygen metabolism or venous oxygenation in either age group.Findings indicated an age-related imbalance between oxygen delivery, consumption and demand, evidenced by a decreased supply of oxygen with unchanged metabolism resulting in increased oxygen extraction. CBF predicted attention when the age-effect was controlled, suggesting a task- specific CBF- cognition relationship.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5963791?pdf=render
spellingShingle Sarah J Catchlove
Helen Macpherson
Matthew E Hughes
Yufen Chen
Todd B Parrish
Andrew Pipingas
An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.
PLoS ONE
title An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.
title_full An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.
title_fullStr An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.
title_full_unstemmed An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.
title_short An investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization, blood flow and cognition in healthy aging.
title_sort investigation of cerebral oxygen utilization blood flow and cognition in healthy aging
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5963791?pdf=render
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