Abstract

Objective: Examine the association of adiponectin and metabolic syndrome components with measures of global and lobar cortical thickness. Background: Metabolic syndrome has been associated with structural brain changes, but the relationship of adiponectin and cortical thickness is understudied. Methods: The Northern Manhattan Study MRI Sub-Study is a mostly Hispanic, stroke-free, prospective cohort study of older adults. Cortical thickness (mm) was obtained from T1-weighted brain MRIs using the publically-available Freesurfer software. Regional cortical thickness metrics were averaged to obtain mean lobar cortical thickness. Adiponectin (μg/mL) was measured at baseline (1993-2001). Metabolic syndrome components were measured at MRI Sub-Study baseline (2003-2008). We estimated the cross-sectional associations of adiponectin (per 1 SD) and metabolic syndrome components with global and lobar cortical thickness (per 1 SD) using multivariable linear regression models adjusted for sociodemographic factors, APOE ε4 allele presence, and health-related behaviors. All hypothesis testing was two-sided with an alpha level of 5%. Results: Freesurfer data were available in 947 participants (mean±SD age=70±9 years, 63% women, 66% Hispanics, 16% black, and 15% white). Global cortical thickness was normally distributed (mean±SD = 2.3±0.1mm). In fully adjusted models, 1 SD (4.9μg/mL) increase in adiponectin was associated with smaller overall (β [95%CI] = -0.07 [-0.14, -0.0002]) and parietal cortical thickness (β [95%CI] = -0.08 [-0.03, -0.0002]). Greater blood glucose levels significantly associated with smaller occipital cortical thickness (β [95%CI] = -0.003 [-0.006, -0.0007]). Greater waist circumference was significantly associated with smaller frontal cortical thickness (β [95%CI] = -0.02 [-0.04, -0.0007]). Neither blood pressure (systolic and diastolic) nor cholesterol (total, HDL-C, and LDL-C) were associated with global or regional cortical thickness. Conclusions: There was heterogeneity in the cross-sectional associations between adiponectin, metabolic syndrome components, and regional cortical thickness. Further studies are needed to explore the temporal relationship between risk factors and cortical thinning.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call