Κυριακή 14 Οκτωβρίου 2018

Age-Related Declines in Occipital GABA are Associated with Reduced Fluid Processing Ability

Publication date: Available online 14 October 2018

Source: Academic Radiology

Author(s): Molly Simmonite, Joshua Carp, Bradley R. Foerster, Lynn Ossher, Myria Petrou, Daniel H. Weissman, Thad A. Polk

Rationale and Objectives

Healthy aging is associated with pervasive declines in cognitive, motor, and sensory functioning. There are, however, substantial individual differences in behavioral performance among older adults. Several lines of animal research link age-related reductions of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), the brain's primary inhibitory neurotransmitter, to age-related cognitive, motor, and sensory decline. Our study used proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) at 3T to explore whether occipital GABA declines with age in humans and whether individual differences in occipital GABA are linked to individual differences in fluid processing ability.

Materials and Methods

We used a MEGA-PRESS sequence that combines frequency spectral editing with a point-resolved spectroscopy sequence to quantify GABA. Spectra were obtained from a 30 × 30 × 25mm voxel placed in the occipital cortex of 20 young adults (mean age 20.7 years) and 18 older adults (mean age 76.5 years). Participants also performed 11 fluid processing tasks outside the scanner, the results of which were z-scored and averaged to calculate a summary measure of fluid processing ability. Regression analysis was employed to determine the relationship between GABA concentrations in the occipital cortex and a summary measure of fluid processing ability.

Results

Occipital GABA was significantly lower in older participants compared to the younger participants. We also observed a significant positive relationship between occipital GABA and fluid processing ability. In fact, higher GABA was associated with better task performance in 10 of the 11 tasks.

Conclusion

These findings suggest that GABA levels decline with age in humans and are associated with declines in fluid processing ability.



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