Inflammation, amyloid, and atrophy in the aging brain: relationships with longitudinal changes in cognition

Publication date

2020-05-29T15:04:41Z

2020-05-29T15:04:41Z

2017-06-05

2020-05-29T15:04:41Z

Abstract

Amyloid deposition occurs in aging, even in individuals free from cognitive symptoms, and is often interpreted as preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathophysiology. YKL-40 is a marker of neuroinflammation, being increased in AD, and hypothesized to interact with amyloid-B (AB ) in causing cognitive decline early in the cascade of AD pathophysiology. Whether and how A and YKL-40 affect brain and cognitive changes in cognitively healthy older adults is still unknown. We studied 89 participants (mean age: 73.1 years) with cerebrospinal fluid samples at baseline, and both MRI and cognitive assessments from two time-points separated by two years. We tested how baseline levels of AB 42 and YKL-40 correlated with changes in cortical thickness and cognition. Thickness change correlated with AB 42 only in AB 42+ participants (<600 pg/mL, n = 27) in the left motor and premotor cortices. AB 42 was unrelated to cognitive change. Increased YKL-40 was associated with less preservation of scores on the animal naming test in the total sample (r = -0.28, p = 0.012) and less preservation of a score reflecting global cognitive function for AB 42+ participants (r = -0.58, p = 0.004). Our results suggest a role for inflammation in brain atrophy and cognitive changes in cognitively normal older adults, which partly depended on AB accumulation.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

IOS Press

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-161146

Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 2017, vol. 58, num. 3, p. 829-840

https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-161146

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

(c) Sala Llonch, Roser et al., 2017

This item appears in the following Collection(s)