3.8 Article

Abnormal Cholesterol is Associated with Prefrontal White Matter Abnormalities among Obese Adults: a Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study

Journal

NEURORADIOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 24, Issue 6, Pages 854-861

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/197140091102400604

Keywords

cholesterol; obesity; prefrontal lobes; MRI; fractional anisotropy

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The brain is the most cholesterol-rich organ in the body. Although most of the cholesterol in the brain is produced endogenously, some studies suggest that systemic cholesterol may be able to enter the brain. We investigated whether abnormal cholesterol profiles correlated with diffusion-tensor-imaging-based estimates of white matter microstructural integrity of lean and overweight/obese (o/o) adults. Twenty-two lean and 39 obese adults underwent magnetic resonance imaging, kept a three-day food diary, and had a standardized assessment of fasting blood lipids. The lean group ate less cholesterol-rich food than o/o although both groups ate equivalent servings of food per day. Voxel-wise correlational analyses controlling for age, diabetes, and white matter hyperintensities, resulted in two significant clusters of negative associations between abnormal cholesterol profile and fractional anisotropy, located in the left and right prefrontal lobes. When the groups were split, the lean subjects showed no associations, whereas the o/o group expanded the association to three significant clusters, still in the frontal lobes. These findings suggest that cholesterol profile abnormalities may explain some of the reductions in white matter microstructural integrity that are reported in obesity.

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