4.6 Article

Cognitive Aging and the Hippocampus in Older Adults

Journal

Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2016.00298

Keywords

cognitive aging; hippocampus; MoCA; NIH toolbox; structural magnetic resonance imaging

Funding

  1. McKnight Brain Research Foundation
  2. University of Florida Cognitive Aging and Memory Clinical Translational Research Program
  3. NIH/NCATS CTSA [UL1 TR000064, KL2 TR000065, NIA K01AG050707-A1, R01AG054077]
  4. National Science Foundation [DMR-1157490]
  5. State of Florida

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The hippocampus is one of the most well studied structures in the human brain. While age-related decline in hippocampal volume is well documented, most of our knowledge about hippocampal structure-function relationships was discovered in the context of neurological and neurodegenerative diseases. The relationship between cognitive aging and hippocampal structure in the absence of disease remains relatively understudied. Furthermore, the few studies that have investigated the role of the hippocampus in cognitive aging have produced contradictory results. To address these issues, we assessed 93 older adults from the general community (mean age = 71.9 +/- 9.3 years) on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), a brief cognitive screening measure for dementia, and the NIH Toolbox-Cognitive Battery (NIHTB-CB), a computerized neurocognitive battery. High-resolution structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to estimate hippocampal volume. Lower MoCA Total (p = 0.01) and NIHTB-CB Fluid Cognition (p<0.001) scores were associated with decreased hippocampal volume, even while controlling for sex and years of education. Decreased hippocampal volume was significantly associated with decline in multiple NIHTB-CB subdomains, including episodic memory, working memory, processing speed and executive function. This study provides important insight into the multifaceted role of the hippocampus in cognitive aging.

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