4.8 Article

Age-related memory impairment associated with loss of parietal deactivation but preserved hippocampal activation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0706818105

Keywords

aging; fMRI; hippocampus; default network; Alzheimer's disease

Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [R01-AG027435, R01 AG027435-03, R01 AG027435, P50-AG00513421] Funding Source: Medline

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The neural underpinnings of age-related memory impairment remain to be fully elucidated. Using a subsequent memory face-name functional MRI (fMRI) paradigm, young and old adults showed a similar magnitude and extent of hippocampal activation during successful associative encoding. Young adults demonstrated greater deactivation (task-induced decrease in BOLD signal) in medial parietal regions during successful compared with failed encoding, whereas old adults as a group did not demonstrate a differential pattern of deactivation between trial types. The failure of deactivation was particularly evident in old adults who performed poorly on the memory task. These low-performing old adults demonstrated greater hippocampal and prefrontal activation to achieve successful encoding trials, possibly as a compensatory response. Findings suggest that successful encoding requires the coordination of neural activity in hippocampal, prefrontal, and parietal regions, and that age-related memory impairment may be primarily related to a loss of deactivation in medial parietal regions.

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