Regional network covariance patterns of white matter integrity related to cardiorespiratory fitness in healthy aging
Samantha G. Smith, Pradyumna K. Bharadwaj, David A. Raichlen, Matthew D. Grilli, Jessica R. Andrews-Hanna, Georg A. Hishaw, Matthew J. Huentelman, Theodore P. Trouard, Gene E. Alexander

TL;DR
Higher cardiorespiratory fitness is linked to better white matter integrity in specific brain regions of older adults.
Contribution
Identified four CRF-related white matter integrity patterns using multivariate analysis in aging adults.
Findings
CRF-related patterns involve commissural and association tracts like the corpus callosum and arcuate fasciculus.
Age and white matter lesions reduce expression of CRF-related white matter patterns.
Radial diffusivity and fractional anisotropy patterns are most strongly tied to CRF.
Abstract
Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF), measured by VO2max, is an indicator of vascular functioning that can influence the integrity of brain microstructural white matter tracts in aging. How CRF is related to regional patterns of white matter bundles for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) diffusion metrics (axial diffusivity, AD; radial diffusivity, RD; mean diffusivity, MD; fractional anisotropy, FA) has been less studied. We used a multivariate analysis method, the Scaled Subprofile Model (SSM), to identify network patterns of MRI tract-specific white matter integrity (WMI) for AD, RD, MD, and FA related to VO2max and to evaluate their relation to demographic, vascular health, and dementia risk factors in 167 cognitively unimpaired older adults, ages 50 to 88. We identified four CRF-related regional patterns of WMI characterized by enhanced integrity in commissural pathways that connect areas…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
