首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience >Gray Matter Volume and Resting-State Functional Connectivity of the Motor Cortex-Cerebellum Network Reflect the Individual Variation in Masticatory Performance in Healthy Elderly People
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Gray Matter Volume and Resting-State Functional Connectivity of the Motor Cortex-Cerebellum Network Reflect the Individual Variation in Masticatory Performance in Healthy Elderly People

机译:运动皮层-小脑网络的灰色物质量和静止状态功能连接反映了健康老年人的咀嚼性能的个体差异

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Neuroimaging studies have consistently identified brain activation in the motor area and the cerebellum during chewing. In this study, we further investigated the structural and functional brain signature associated with masticatory performance, which is a widely used index for evaluating overall masticatory function in the elderly. Twenty-five healthy elderly participants underwent oral examinations, masticatory performance tests, and behavioral assessments, including the Cognitive Abilities Screening Instrument and the short-form Geriatric Depression Scale. Masticatory performance was assessed with the validated colorimetric method, using color-changeable chewing gum. T1-weighted structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and resting-state function MRI were performed. We analyzed alterations in gray matter volume (GMV) using voxel-based morphometry and resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) between brain regions using the seed-based method. The structural and functional MRI analyses revealed the following findings: (1) the GMV change in the premotor cortex was positively correlated with masticatory performance. (2) The rsFC between the cerebellum and the premotor cortex was positively correlated with masticatory performance. (3) The GMV changes in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), as well as the rsFC between the cerebellum and the DLPFC, were positively correlated with masticatory performance. The findings showed that in the premotor cortex, a reduction of GMV and rsFC would reflect declined masticatory performance. The positive correlation between DLPFC connectivity and masticatory performance implies that masticatory ability is associated with cognitive function in the elderly. Our findings highlighted the role of the central nervous system in masticatory performance and increased our understanding of the structural and functional brain signature underlying individual variations in masticatory performance in the elderly.
机译:神经影像学研究一致地确定了咀嚼过程中运动区域和小脑的大脑激活。在这项研究中,我们进一步研究了与咀嚼性能相关的结构和功能性大脑特征,这是用于评估老年人总体咀嚼功能的广泛指标。 25名健康的老年参与者接受了口腔检查,咀嚼性能测试和行为评估,包括认知能力筛查仪器和简短的老年抑郁量表。用经验证的比色法,使用可变色的口香糖评估咀嚼性能。进行了T1加权结构磁共振成像(MRI)和静止状态功能MRI。我们使用基于体素的形态计量学分析了灰质体积(GMV)的变化,并使用基于种子的方法分析了大脑区域之间的静止状态功能连接(rsFC)。 MRI的结构和功能分析显示以下发现:(1)运动前皮质中GMV的变化与咀嚼性能呈正相关。 (2)小脑与运动前皮层之间的rsFC与咀嚼性能呈正相关。 (3)背外侧前额叶皮层(DLPFC)中的GMV变化以及小脑与DLPFC之间的rsFC与咀嚼性能呈正相关。研究结果表明,在运动前皮层中,GMV和rsFC的降低将反映咀嚼性能下降。 DLPFC连接性与咀嚼性能之间的正相关关系表明,咀嚼能力与老年人的认知功能有关。我们的研究结果突显了中枢神经系统在咀嚼行为中的作用,并加深了我们对老年人咀嚼行为个体差异背后的结构和功能性大脑特征的理解。

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