海马依赖性任务表现与海马灰质髓鞘化和铁含量之间的关系

Brain and neuroscience advances Pub Date : 2021-04-26 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23982128211011923
Ian A Clark, Martina F Callaghan, Nikolaus Weiskopf, Eleanor A Maguire
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摘要

长期以来,人们一直将健康人在场景想象、自传体记忆回忆、未来思维和空间导航方面的个体差异与海马体结构联系在一起,但事实上这种关系的证据并不一致。现有的研究主要集中在海马体积方面。不过,现在可以利用定量神经成像技术来模拟体内组织微观结构的不同特性,如髓鞘化和铁。以往的研究已将此类测量结果与认知任务的表现联系起来,尤其是在老年人中。在此,我们研究了年轻、健康的成年参与者在场景想象、自传体记忆、未来思维和空间导航任务中的表现是否与海马灰质髓鞘化或铁含量有关。我们采用多参数映射方案(0.8 毫米各向同性体素)收集了 217 名认知任务得分差异较大的大样本人群的磁共振成像数据。我们发现几乎没有证据表明海马灰质髓鞘化或铁含量与任务表现有关。在使用不同的分析方法(基于体素的量化、部分相关性),对整个大脑、海马感兴趣区和海马后部与前部的比例进行研究时,以及在不同的参与者亚组(按性别和任务表现划分)中,情况都是如此。因此,海马灰质髓鞘和铁水平的变化可能无助于解释依赖海马的任务中表现的个体差异,至少在年轻健康的个体中是如此。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The relationship between hippocampal-dependent task performance and hippocampal grey matter myelination and iron content.

Individual differences in scene imagination, autobiographical memory recall, future thinking and spatial navigation have long been linked with hippocampal structure in healthy people, although evidence for such relationships is, in fact, mixed. Extant studies have predominantly concentrated on hippocampal volume. However, it is now possible to use quantitative neuroimaging techniques to model different properties of tissue microstructure in vivo such as myelination and iron. Previous work has linked such measures with cognitive task performance, particularly in older adults. Here we investigated whether performance on scene imagination, autobiographical memory, future thinking and spatial navigation tasks was associated with hippocampal grey matter myelination or iron content in young, healthy adult participants. Magnetic resonance imaging data were collected using a multi-parameter mapping protocol (0.8 mm isotropic voxels) from a large sample of 217 people with widely-varying cognitive task scores. We found little evidence that hippocampal grey matter myelination or iron content were related to task performance. This was the case using different analysis methods (voxel-based quantification, partial correlations), when whole brain, hippocampal regions of interest, and posterior:anterior hippocampal ratios were examined, and across different participant sub-groups (divided by gender and task performance). Variations in hippocampal grey matter myelin and iron levels may not, therefore, help to explain individual differences in performance on hippocampal-dependent tasks, at least in young, healthy individuals.

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