Author:
Neyland Blake R,Lockhart Samuel N,Lyday Robert G,Baker Laura D,Handing Elizabeth P,Miller Michael E,Kritchevsky Stephen B,Laurienti Paul J,Hugenschmidt Christina E
Abstract
ABSTRACTBACKGROUNDPhysical resilience with age is considered a key feature of healthy aging, but current understanding of the neural contributions to resilience is limited. Additionally, few methods exist to identify physical resilience and observe the mechanisms through which resilience manifests.METHODSTo address these gaps, we used data from 189 participants from the Brain Networks and Mobility (B-NET) study who completed the short physical performance battery (SPPB) as well as its expanded version (eSPPB), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and functional MRI (fMRI). Functional brain networks were generated using graph theory methods. We grouped participants based on SPPB scores (<10=unhealthy & 10-12=healthy) and median splits of white matter hyperintensity volumes: Expected Healthy (EH: low WMH, healthy SPPB, n=81), Expected Impaired (EI: high WMH, unhealthy SPPB, n=42), Unexpected Healthy (UH: high WMH, healthy SPPB, n=53), and Unexpected Impaired (UI: low WMH, unhealthy SPPB, n=13). UH is considered the “resilient” group due to their maintained function despite elevated WMH burden. Continuous analyses assessed the relationships between network properties, mobility, and cognition.RESULTSHigher SPPB scores were associated (p<0.01) with greater sensorimotor cortex community structure (SMN-CS) consistency. While no main effect of the resilience interaction term (SPPB*WMH) was found on SMN-CS, UH showed higher numbers of second-order connections between the SMN and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) than EI (p<0.01).CONCLUSIONSIncreased connectivity between SMN and ACC may be a marker of physical resilience within the brain.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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