4.7 Article

Age-Related Changes in Resting-State Networks of A Large Sample Size of Healthy Elderly

Journal

CNS NEUROSCIENCE & THERAPEUTICS
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages 817-825

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cns.12396

Keywords

Aging; Default mode subnetwork; Resting-state network

Funding

  1. Taiwan National Science Council [NSC 100-2628-E-010-002-MY3, NSC 102-2321-B-010-023]
  2. National Health Research Institute [NHRI-EX103-10310EI]
  3. Ministry of Education, Aim for the Top University Plan of Taiwan

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aims: Population aging is burdening the society globally, and the evaluation of functional networks is the key toward understanding cognitive changes in normal aging. However, the effect of age on default mode subnetworks has not been documented well, and age-related changes in many resting-state networks remain debatable. The purpose of this study was to propose more precise results for these issues using a large sample size. Methods: We used group-level meta-ICA analysis and dual regression approach for identifying resting-state networks from functional magnetic resonance imaging data of 430 healthy elderly participants. Partial correlation was used to observe age-related correlations within and between resting-state networks. Results: In the default mode network, only the ventral subnetwork negatively correlated with age. Age-related decrease in functional connectivity was also noted in the auditory, right frontoparietal, sensorimotor, and visual medial networks. Further, some age-related increases and decreases were observed for between-network correlations. Conclusion: The results of this study suggest that only the ventral default mode subnetwork had age-related decline in functional connectivity and several reverse patterns of resting-state networks for network development. Understanding age-related network changes may provide solutions for the impact of population aging and diagnosis of neurodegenerative diseases.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available