Effects of Brain Maintenance and Cognitive Reserve on Age-Related Decline in Three Cognitive Abilities

Author:

Gazes Yunglin1ORCID,Lee Seonjoo23ORCID,Fang Zhiqian4,Mensing Ashley1,Noofoory Diala1,Hidalgo Nazario Geneva1,Babukutty Reshma1,Chen Bryan B1,Habeck Christian1ORCID,Stern Yaakov1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cognitive Neuroscience Division, Department of Neurology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center , New York, New York , USA

2. Department of Psychiatry and Biostatistics, Columbia University , New York, New York , USA

3. Mental Health Data Science, New York State Psychiatric Institute , New York, New York , USA

4. Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University , New York, New York , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Age-related cognitive changes can be influenced by both brain maintenance (BM), which refers to the relative absence over time of changes in neural resources or neuropathologic changes, and cognitive reserve (CR), which encompasses brain processes that allow for better-than-expected behavioral performance given the degree of life-course-related brain changes. This study evaluated the effects of age, BM, and CR on longitudinal changes over 2 visits, 5 years apart, in 3 cognitive abilities that capture most of age-related variability. Methods Participants included 254 healthy adults aged 20–80 years at recruitment. Potential BM was estimated using whole-brain cortical thickness and white matter mean diffusivity at both visits. Education and intelligence quotient (IQ; estimated with American National Adult Reading Test) were tested as moderating factors for cognitive changes in the 3 cognitive abilities. Results Consistent with BM—after accounting for age, sex, and baseline performance—individual differences in the preservation of mean diffusivity and cortical thickness were independently associated with relative preservation in the 3 abilities. Consistent with CR—after accounting for age, sex, baseline performance, and structural brain changes—higher IQ, but not education, was associated with reduced 5-year decline in reasoning (β = 0.387, p = .002), and education was associated with reduced decline in speed (β = 0.237, p = .039). Discussion These results demonstrate that both CR and BM can moderate cognitive changes in healthy aging and that the 2 mechanisms can make differential contributions to preserved cognition.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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