Sexual Dimorphism in Healthy Aging and Mild Cognitive Impairment: A DTI Study.
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O'Dwyer L, Lamberton F, Bokde AL, Ewers M, Faluyi YO, Tanner C, Mazoyer B, O'Neill D, Bartley M, Collins R, Coughlan T, Prvulovic D, Hampel H, Sexual Dimorphism in Healthy Aging and Mild Cognitive Impairment: A DTI Study., PloS one, 7, 7, 2012, e37021
Abstract
Previous PET and MRI studies have indicated that the degree to which pathology translates into clinical symptoms is
strongly dependent on sex with women more likely to express pathology as a diagnosis of AD, whereas men are more
resistant to clinical symptoms in the face of the same degree of pathology. Here we use DTI to investigate the difference
between male and female white matter tracts in healthy older participants (24 women, 16 men) and participants with mild
cognitive impairment (21 women, 12 men). Differences between control and MCI participants were found in fractional
anisotropy (FA), radial diffusion (DR), axial diffusion (DA) and mean diffusion (MD). A significant main effect of sex was also
reported for FA, MD and DR indices, with male control and male MCI participants having significantly more microstructural
damage than their female counterparts. There was no sex by diagnosis interaction. Male MCIs also had significantly less
normalised grey matter (GM) volume than female MCIs. However, in terms of absolute brain volume, male controls had
significantly more brain volume than female controls. Normalised GM and WM volumes were found to decrease significantly
with age with no age by sex interaction. Overall, these data suggest that the same degree of cognitive impairment is
associated with greater structural damage in men compared with women
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Sponsor: Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
Grant Number: 08/IN.1/B1846
Sponsor: Irish Research Council for Science and Engineering Technology (IRCSET)
Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/doneill
Type of material: Journal Article

