Adipose tissue distribution from body MRI is associated with cross-sectional and longitudinal brain age in adults

•There is an intimate body-brain connection in ageing, and obesity is a key risk factor for poor cardiometabolic health and neurodegenerative conditions.•We investigated adipose tissue distribution from body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in relation to brain structure using MRI-based morphometry...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage clinical 2022-01, Vol.33, p.102949, Article 102949
Hauptverfasser: Beck, Dani, de Lange, Ann-Marie G., Alnæs, Dag, Maximov, Ivan I., Pedersen, Mads L., Leinhard, Olof Dahlqvist, Linge, Jennifer, Simon, Rozalyn, Richard, Geneviève, Ulrichsen, Kristine M., Dørum, Erlend S., Kolskår, Knut K., Sanders, Anne-Marthe, Winterton, Adriano, Gurholt, Tiril P., Kaufmann, Tobias, Steen, Nils Eiel, Nordvik, Jan Egil, Andreassen, Ole A., Westlye, Lars T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•There is an intimate body-brain connection in ageing, and obesity is a key risk factor for poor cardiometabolic health and neurodegenerative conditions.•We investigated adipose tissue distribution from body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in relation to brain structure using MRI-based morphometry and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI).•The results indicated older-appearing brains in people with higher measures of adipose tissue, and accelerated ageing over the course of the study period in people with higher measures of adipose tissue. There is an intimate body-brain connection in ageing, and obesity is a key risk factor for poor cardiometabolic health and neurodegenerative conditions. Although research has demonstrated deleterious effects of obesity on brain structure and function, the majority of studies have used conventional measures such as waist-to-hip ratio, waist circumference, and body mass index. While sensitive to gross features of body composition, such global anthropometric features fail to describe regional differences in body fat distribution and composition. The sample consisted of baseline brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) acquired from 790 healthy participants aged 18–94 years (mean ± standard deviation (SD) at baseline: 46.8 ± 16.3), and follow-up brain MRI collected from 272 of those individuals (two time-points with 19.7 months interval, on average (min = 9.8, max = 35.6). Of the 790 included participants, cross-sectional body MRI data was available from a subgroup of 286 participants, with age range 19–86 (mean = 57.6, SD = 15.6). Adopting a mixed cross-sectional and longitudinal design, we investigated cross-sectional body magnetic resonance imaging measures of adipose tissue distribution in relation to longitudinal brain structure using MRI-based morphometry (T1) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). We estimated tissue-specific brain age at two time points and performed Bayesian multilevel modelling to investigate the associations between adipose measures at follow-up and brain age gap (BAG) – the difference between actual age and the prediction of the brain’s biological age – at baseline and follow-up. We also tested for interactions between BAG and both time and age on each adipose measure. The results showed credible associations between T1-based BAG and liver fat, muscle fat infiltration (MFI), and weight-to-muscle ratio (WMR), indicating older-appearing brains in people with higher measures of adipose tissue. Longitudinal evi
ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102949