White matter lesions account for all age-related declines in speed but not in intelligence.
MRI scans measured white matter lesion prevalence (WMLP) in 65 people ages 65-84 years who also took 17 cognitive tests: 3 tests of general fluid intelligence, 3 of vocabulary, 2 of episodic and 3 of working memory, 2 of processing speed, and 4 of frontal and executive function. Entry of age with WM...
Główni autorzy: | Rabbitt, P, Scott, M, Lunn, M, Thacker, N, Lowe, C, Pendleton, N, Horan, M, Jackson, A |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Język: | English |
Wydane: |
2007
|
Podobne zapisy
-
Age-associated losses of brain volume predict longitudinal cognitive declines over 8 to 20 years.
od: Rabbitt, P, i wsp.
Wydane: (2008) -
Understanding terminal decline in cognition and risk of death - Methodological and theoretical implications of practice and dropout effects
od: Rabbitt, P, i wsp.
Wydane: (2006) -
White matter lesions may be an early marker for age-related cognitive decline
od: Cassandra Morrison, i wsp.
Wydane: (2022-01-01) -
White matter lesion progression, brain atrophy, and cognitive decline: the Austrian stroke prevention study.
od: Schmidt, R, i wsp.
Wydane: (2005) -
White Matter Lesions and Migrain
od: Fahrettin Över, i wsp.
Wydane: (2007-06-01)