Age‐related differences in Locus Coeruleus integrity and their differential relationships with cognition
Ji‐Hyun Kim, Xiaoyang Hu, Jasmine Ranieri, Heidi I.L. Jacobs, Hwamee Oh

TL;DR
This study explores how the locus coeruleus changes with age and how these changes relate to cognitive abilities in young and older adults.
Contribution
The study reveals age-related differences in locus coeruleus integrity and identifies domain-specific cognitive relationships that vary by age group.
Findings
LC intensity was significantly higher in older compared to young adults.
Left LC intensity was associated with language in young adults, while right LC intensity was linked to working memory.
No direct association between mean LC intensity and cognitive domains was found in either age group.
Abstract
The locus coeruleus (LC), a key source of norepinephrine production, plays an essential role in arousal and cognitive functions. Abnormal tau begins to appear in the brain stem, the LC in particular, even in young adulthood long before brain tau and amyloid pathology. To what extent LC integrity affects cognitive performance accounting for age is unknown. In this study, we examined age‐related differences in LC integrity and its relationship with cognition in the lifespan sample. A total of 124 cognitively normal adults (72 older (mean age: 68.85.9; 52 females) and 52 young (mean age: 24.25.4; 35 females)) from Brown Multimodal Imaging of Cognition, Aging, and Alzheimer's Disease (MICAAD) study underwent extensive neuropsychological assessment and a subset of 40 adults completed LC MT‐MRI imaging. Principal component (PC) analyses were applied to a set of neuropsychological tests that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Alzheimer's disease research and treatments · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
