4.7 Article

Spontaneous sensorimotor beta power and cortical thickness uniquely predict motor function in healthy aging

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 263, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119651

Keywords

Magnetoencephalography; Multimodal; Sensorimotor; Resting-state; Oscillations

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01-MH116782, R01-MH118013, P20-GM144641]

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This study found that spontaneous beta power increases with age in the sensorimotor cortices, with no clear association between cortical thickness and spontaneous beta power. In the sensorimotor regions, cortical thickness and spontaneous beta power each uniquely contribute to the prediction of motor function when controlling for age.
Background: Spontaneous beta activity in the primary motor cortices has been shown to increase in amplitude with advancing age, and that such increases are tightly coupled to stronger motor-related beta oscillations during movement planning. However, the relationship between these age-related changes in spontaneous beta in the motor cortices, local cortical thickness, and overall motor function remains unclear.Methods: We collected resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG), high-resolution structural MRI, and motor function scores using a neuropsychological battery from 126 healthy adults (56 female; age range = 22-72 years). MEG data were source-imaged and a whole-brain vertex-wise regression model was used to assess age-related differences in spontaneous beta power across the cortex. Cortical thickness was computed from the structural MRI data and local beta power and cortical thickness values were extracted from the sensorimotor cortices. To determine the unique contribution of age, spontaneous beta power, and cortical thickness to the prediction of motor function, a hierarchical regression approach was used.Results: There was an increase in spontaneous beta power with age across the cortex, with the strongest increase being centered on the sensorimotor cortices. Sensorimotor cortical thickness was not related to spontaneous beta power, above and beyond age. Interestingly, both cortical thickness and spontaneous beta power in sensorimotor regions each uniquely contributed to the prediction of motor function when controlling for age.Discussion: This multimodal study showed that cortical thickness and spontaneous beta activity in the sensorimo-tor cortices have dissociable contributions to motor function across the adult lifespan. These findings highlight the complexity of interactions between structure and function and the importance of understanding these interactions in order to advance our understanding of healthy aging and disease.

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