Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPrior research has demonstrated consistent associations between age and cortical thickness, as well as longitudinal reductions in cortical thickness in older adults (e.g., Salat et al., 2004; Storsve et al., 2014). To date, the aging of regions supporting speech production has not been directly investigated. Such information is, however, needed to differentiate age‐related cortical atrophy in speech regions from that occurring due to underlying neurodegenerative diseases. We examined cross‐sectional associations between age and cortical thickness of brain regions supporting speech motor control. These areas include subregions of the premotor cortex, primary motor area, supplementary motor area, pars opercularis, posterior inferior frontal sulcus, and insula as defined by the Directions Into Velocities of Articulators (DIVA) model ‐ a model for neural representation and mechanisms of speech motor control (Tourville & Guenther, 2011).MethodThe data were obtained from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative GO/2 (ADNI). Participants included 163 (77 M, 86 F) cognitively intact adults aged 56‐89 years (Mean = 73.45, SD = 6.23). All participants were right‐handed and had at least 12 years of education (Mean = 16.53, SD = 2.55). Whole‐brain T1‐weighted MRI images were acquired by a 3‐Tesla Siemens scanner. FreeSurfer software was used for cortical surface reconstruction and to extract the cortical thickness of speech regions as identified by the SpeechLabel Parcellation System (Cai et al., 2014) developed based on the DIVA model.ResultSignificant associations between age and cortical thickness was observed in subregions of left premotor cortex, primary motor area, supplementary motor area, and presupplementary motor area with more limited effects in the right hemisphere. Cortical thickness of pars opercularis, posterior inferior frontal sulcus, and insula did not show significant changes over the aging process. Cross‐sectional interactions were found with regions in the left hemisphere being thicker at younger ages and having a larger negative age slope compared to their corresponding regions in the right hemisphere.ConclusionThe findings of the study suggest that certain speech‐related regions show atrophy with aging, however, these changes are not uniform. In addition, laterality in cortical thickness of speech regions at younger ages was observed to diminish over the normal aging process.

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