PURPOSE: To explore gender, age-related, and regional differences of magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) of brain cortical and subcortical gray matter (GM). MATERIALS AND METHODS: In all, 102 healthy subjects (51 women and 51 men; range 25-84 years) were examined with 3-mm thick MT images. We assessed MTR in automatically segmented GM structures including frontal, parietal-insular, temporal, and occipital cortex, caudate, pallidus and putamen, and cerebellar cortex. A general linear model analysis was conducted to ascertain the linear and quadratic relationship among the MTR and gender, age, and anatomical structure. RESULTS: The effect of gender was borderline (P = 0.07) in all GM structures (with higher MTR values in men), whereas age showed a significant linear as well as quadratic effect in all cortical and subcortical GM structures (P ≤ 0.001). Quadratic age-related decrease in MTR began at about 40 years of age. Mean and standard deviation (SD) of MTR had the following decreasing order: thalamus (58.3 + 0.8), pallidus (56.8 ± 1.3), caudate (55.5 ± 1.6) and putamen (54.6 ± 1.1); temporal (56.8 ± 0.9), parietal-insular (56.8 ± 1.1), frontal (56.5 ± 1.1), occipital (55.4 ± 1.0) and cerebellar (53.2 ± 1.0) cortex. In post-hoc testing, all regional pairwise differences were statistically significant except pallidus vs. temporal or parietal-insular cortex, caudate vs. occipital cortex, frontal vs. parietal-insular or temporal cortex. CONCLUSION: MTR of the cortical and subcortical brain GM structures decreases quadratically after midlife and shows significant regional differences.

Mario Mascalchi, Nicola Toschi, Andrea Ginestroni, Marco Giannelli, Emanuele Nicolai, Marco Aiello, et al. (2014). Gender, age-related, and regional differences of the magnetization transfer ratio of the cortical and subcortical brain gray matter. JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 40, 360-366 [10.1002/jmri.24355].

Gender, age-related, and regional differences of the magnetization transfer ratio of the cortical and subcortical brain gray matter

DICIOTTI, STEFANO
2014

Abstract

PURPOSE: To explore gender, age-related, and regional differences of magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) of brain cortical and subcortical gray matter (GM). MATERIALS AND METHODS: In all, 102 healthy subjects (51 women and 51 men; range 25-84 years) were examined with 3-mm thick MT images. We assessed MTR in automatically segmented GM structures including frontal, parietal-insular, temporal, and occipital cortex, caudate, pallidus and putamen, and cerebellar cortex. A general linear model analysis was conducted to ascertain the linear and quadratic relationship among the MTR and gender, age, and anatomical structure. RESULTS: The effect of gender was borderline (P = 0.07) in all GM structures (with higher MTR values in men), whereas age showed a significant linear as well as quadratic effect in all cortical and subcortical GM structures (P ≤ 0.001). Quadratic age-related decrease in MTR began at about 40 years of age. Mean and standard deviation (SD) of MTR had the following decreasing order: thalamus (58.3 + 0.8), pallidus (56.8 ± 1.3), caudate (55.5 ± 1.6) and putamen (54.6 ± 1.1); temporal (56.8 ± 0.9), parietal-insular (56.8 ± 1.1), frontal (56.5 ± 1.1), occipital (55.4 ± 1.0) and cerebellar (53.2 ± 1.0) cortex. In post-hoc testing, all regional pairwise differences were statistically significant except pallidus vs. temporal or parietal-insular cortex, caudate vs. occipital cortex, frontal vs. parietal-insular or temporal cortex. CONCLUSION: MTR of the cortical and subcortical brain GM structures decreases quadratically after midlife and shows significant regional differences.
2014
Mario Mascalchi, Nicola Toschi, Andrea Ginestroni, Marco Giannelli, Emanuele Nicolai, Marco Aiello, et al. (2014). Gender, age-related, and regional differences of the magnetization transfer ratio of the cortical and subcortical brain gray matter. JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 40, 360-366 [10.1002/jmri.24355].
Mario Mascalchi;Nicola Toschi;Andrea Ginestroni;Marco Giannelli;Emanuele Nicolai;Marco Aiello;Andrea Soricelli;Stefano Diciotti
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/394717
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