Brain connectivity moderated the effects of cognitive intraindividual variability on mobility in cognitively frail older adults
Jingyi Wu, Jinyu Chen, Juncen Wu, Wayne Lap Sun Chan, Yijian Yang, Chun Liang Hsu

TL;DR
This study shows how brain connectivity influences the link between cognitive fluctuations and mobility in older adults with cognitive frailty.
Contribution
It identifies specific brain network interactions that moderate the effects of cognitive variability on mobility in cognitively frail individuals.
Findings
Cognitively frail individuals showed greater cognitive variability and reduced sensorimotor network connectivity.
Reduced connectivity between the default mode and fronto-executive networks was observed in cognitively frail individuals.
DMN-FEN connectivity moderated the relationship between cognitive variability and mobility performance in cognitively frail individuals.
Abstract
Cognitive frailty, defined by the coexistence of mild cognitive impairment and physical frailty, imposes greater risk of negative health consequences than either condition alone. Cognitive intraindividual variability (IIV), which reflects the extent of fluctuation in cognitive performance, is an early indicator of impaired cognition and mobility. To extend current understanding of the underlying neural mechanisms of increased IIV due to cognitive frailty, this study investigated the association between brain networks, IIV, and mobility. A total of 38 community-dwelling cognitively frail/non-cognitively frail older adults (CF and non-CF; n = 17 and n = 21, respectively) underwent clinical assessments including the Trail Making Test, Stroop Test, Timed Up and Go test (TUG), and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging. Dispersion across executive tests was computed to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Traumatic Brain Injury Research
