Small vessel disease and cognitive reserve oppositely modulate global network redundancy and cognitive function: A study in middle‐to‐old aged community participants

Author:

Cui Lei1,Hong Hui1,Wang Shuyue1,Zeng Qingze1,Jiaerken Yeerfan1,Yu Xinfeng1,Zhang Ruiting1,Zhang Yao1,Xie Linyun1,Lin Miao1,Liu Lingyun1,Luo Xiao1,Li Kaicheng1,Liu Xiaocao1,Li Jixuan1,Huang Peiyu1ORCID,Zhang Minming1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology The Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University, School of Medicine Hangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractCerebral small vessel disease (SVD) can disrupt the global brain network and lead to cognitive impairment. Conversely, cognitive reserve (CR) can improve one's cognitive ability to handle damaging effects like SVD, partly by optimizing the brain network's organization. Understanding how SVD and CR collectively influence brain networks could be instrumental in preventing cognitive impairment. Recently, brain redundancy has emerged as a critical network protective metric, providing a nuanced perspective of changes in network organization. However, it remains unclear how SVD and CR affect global redundancy and subsequently cognitive function. Here, we included 121 community‐dwelling participants who underwent neuropsychological assessments and a multimodal MRI examination. We visually examined common SVD imaging markers and assessed lifespan CR using the Cognitive Reserve Index Questionnaire. We quantified the global redundancy index (RI) based on the dynamic functional connectome. We then conducted multiple linear regressions to explore the specific cognitive domains related to RI and the associations of RI with SVD and CR. We also conducted mediation analyses to explore whether RI mediated the relationships between SVD, CR, and cognition. We found negative correlations of RI with the presence of microbleeds (MBs) and the SVD total score, and a positive correlation of RI with leisure activity‐related CR (CRI‐leisure). RI was positively correlated with memory and fully mediated the relationships between the MBs, CRI‐leisure, and memory. Our study highlights the potential benefits of promoting leisure activities and keeping brain redundancy for memory preservation in older adults, especially those with SVD.

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province

Publisher

Wiley

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