Neuroimaging Characteristics of Hearing Loss in the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging

Author:

Khandalavala Karl R.1,Marinelli John P.1,Lohse Christine M.2,Przybelski Scott A.2,Petersen Ronald C.23,Vassilaki Maria2,Vemuri Prashanthi4,Carlson Matthew L.15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

2. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

3. Department of Neurology Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

4. Department of Radiology Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

5. Department of Neurologic Surgery Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo investigate the association between standard pure tone and speech audiometry with neuroimaging characteristics reflective of aging and dementia in older adults.Study DesignProspective population‐based study.SettingSingle tertiary care referral center.MethodsParticipants from the Mayo Clinic Study of aging 60 years old or older with normal cognition or mild cognitive impairment, baseline neuroimaging, and a behavioral audiogram associated with neuroimaging were eligible for study. Imaging modalities included structural MRI (sMRI) and fluid‐attenuated inversion recovery MRI (FLAIR‐MRI; N = 605), diffusion tensor imaging MRI (DTI‐MRI; N = 444), and fluorodeoxyglucose‐positron emission tomography (FDG‐PET; N = 413). Multivariable logistic and linear regression models were used to evaluate associations with neuroimaging outcomes.ResultsMean (SD) pure tone average (PTA) was 33 (15) dB HL and mean (SD) word recognition score (WRS) was 91% (14). There were no significant associations between audiometric performance and cortical thinning assessed by sMRI. Each 10‐dB increase in PTA was associated with increased likelihood of abnormal white‐matter hyperintensity (WMH) from FLAIR‐MRI (odds ratio 1.26, P = .02). From DTI‐MRI, participants with <100% WRSs had significantly lower fractional anisotropy in the genu of the corpus callosum (parameter estimate [PE] −0.012, P = .008) compared to those with perfect WRSs. From FDG‐PET, each 10% decrease in WRSs was associated with decreased uptake in the anterior cingulate cortex (PE −0.013, P = .001).ConclusionPoorer audiometric performance was not significantly associated with cortical thinning but was associated with white matter damage relevant to cerebrovascular disease (increased abnormal WMH, decreased corpus callosum diffusion). These neuroimaging results suggest a pathophysiologic link between hearing loss and cerebrovascular disease.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery

Reference28 articles.

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4. Hearing impairment and incident dementia and cognitive decline in older adults: the health ABC study;Deal JA;J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci,2017

5. Hearing Loss and Incident Dementia

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