Cardiometabolic Risk and Structural Brain Development in a Large Community-Based US Cohort.
Authors
Beck D, Westlye LT, Tamnes CK
Journal
Abstract
Cardiometabolic risk factors are already detectable in childhood and adolescence, but their relation to the developing brain remains unclear. The current study tested whether poorer cardiometabolic health is associated with brain structure and microstructure development in 10-17-year-old youth. Using the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study, we analysed data from 3527 participants with 4433 observations across three waves (single wave: n = 2745; two waves: n = 658 participants; three waves: n = 124 participants). We related anthropometric (body-mass index, waist circumference), cardiovascular (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, resting heart rate) and metabolic (haemoglobin A1c, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol) indices to global cortical thickness and surface area, and to white matter fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity. Bayesian multilevel models were fitted to estimate main and time-interaction effects, and sensitivity analyses tested within-person change, prospective prediction to the next wave, and replaced chronological age with puberty status. Higher resting heart rate was associated with higher mean diffusivity, an association that strengthened over time. Higher waist circumference was associated with larger surface area. Other cardiometabolic measures favoured the null, and sensitivity analyses provided little evidence that wave-to-wave changes in cardiometabolic health tracked contemporaneous brain change or predicted subsequent brain structure. Across late childhood and adolescence, brain architecture appears largely insensitive to short-term variation in cardiometabolic risk indices.
Source: PubMed / National Institutes of Health (NIH).
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