4.5 Article

Reduced age-related gray matter loss in the subgenual cingulate cortex in long-term meditators

期刊

BRAIN IMAGING AND BEHAVIOR
卷 15, 期 6, 页码 2824-2832

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11682-021-00578-6

关键词

Aging; Cingulate Cortex; Gray Matter; Meditation; Mindfulness; MRI; Subgenual Cortex

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The study revealed lower rates of age-related gray matter loss in long-term meditation practitioners in specific subregions of the subgenual cingulate gyrus, supporting the idea that meditation may slow the effects of ageing on the brain.
Accumulating evidence suggests that meditation practices have positive effects on brain ageing overall. The cingulate is known to be recruited during meditation, but research into possible effects of meditation on the ageing of the cingulate is currently missing. Thus, the present study was designed to help close this knowledge gap, with particular focus on the subgenual cingulate, a region involved in emotional regulation and autonomic and endocrine functions, making it potentially relevant for meditation. Here, we investigated differences in age-related gray matter loss between 50 long-term meditation practitioners (28 male, 22 female), aged between 24 and 77, and 50 age- and sex-matched controls. Areas of interest were four subregions of the subgenual cingulate gyrus (areas 25, 33, s24, and s32) defined as per the Julich-Brain atlas. Our study revealed a significant age-related decline in all subregions in both meditators and controls, but with significantly lower rates of annual tissue loss in meditators, specifically in left and right area s32 and right area 25. These regions have been shown to play a role in mood regulation, autonomic processing, and the integration of emotion and cognitive processes, which are all involved in and impacted by meditation. Overall, the results add further evidence to the emerging notion that meditation may slow the effects of ageing on the brain.

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