Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6031086 | NeuroImage | 2012 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
We observed a significant reduction in the volume and a significant increase in MD of the whole thalamus with increasing age. The volume of the thalamo-frontal projections decreased significantly with increasing age, however there was no significant relationship between the volumes of the thalamo-cortical projections to the parietal, temporal, and occipital cortex and age. Thalamic shape analysis showed that the greatest shape change was in the anterior thalamus, incorporating regions containing the anterior nucleus, the ventroanterior nucleus and the dorsomedial nucleus. To explore these results further we studied two additional groups of subjects (a younger and an older aged group, n = 20), which showed that the volume of the thalamo-frontal projections was correlated to executive functions scores, as assessed by the Stroop test. These data suggest that atrophy of the frontal thalamo-cortical unit may explain, at least in part, disorders of attention, working memory and executive function associated with increasing age.
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Authors
Emer J. Hughes, Jacqueline Bond, Patricia Svrckova, Antonis Makropoulos, Gareth Ball, David J. Sharp, A. David Edwards, Joeseph V. Hajnal, Serena J. Counsell,