Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9645131 | Neurobiology of Aging | 2005 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
These data serve to define age and gender differences in brain morphology for the Framingham Heart Study. To the degree participants of the Framingham Heart Study are representative the general population, these data can serve as norms for comparison with morphological brain changes associated with aging and disease. In this regard, these cross-sectional quantitative estimates suggest that age-related tissue loss differs quantitatively and qualitatively across brain regions with only minor differences between men and women. In addition, MRI evidence of cerebrovascular disease is common to the aging process and associated with smaller regional brain volumes for a given age, particularly for men. We believe quantitative MRI studies of the Framingham community enables exploration of numerous issues ranging from understanding normal neurobiology of brain aging to assessing the impact of various health factors, particularly those related to cerebrovascular disease, that appear important to maintaining brain health for the general population.
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Authors
Charles DeCarli, Joseph Massaro, Danielle Harvey, John Hald, Mats Tullberg, Rhoda Au, Alexa Beiser, Ralph D'Agostino, Philip A. Wolf,