Abstract

Cerebral white matter (WM) lesion load, as measured by white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volume with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), has been associated with increasing age and cardiovascular risk factors, like hypertension. Physical sports activity (PSA) may play an important role in maintaining WM in the context of healthy aging. In 196 healthy older adults, we investigated whether participants reporting high levels of PSA (n = 36) had reduced total and regional WMH volumes compared to those reporting low levels of PSA (n = 160). Age group [young-old (YO) = 50–69 years; old-old (OO) = 70–89 years], PSA group, and age by PSA group interaction effects were tested, with sex, hypertension, and body mass index (BMI) as covariates. We found significant main effects for age group and age by PSA group interactions for total, frontal, temporal, and parietal WMH volumes. There were no main effects of PSA group on WMH volumes. The OO group with low PSA had greater total, frontal, temporal, and parietal WMH volumes than the YO with low PSA and OO with high PSA groups. WMH volumes for the YO and OO groups with high PSA were comparable. These findings indicate an age group difference in those with low PSA, with greater WMH volumes in older adults, which was not observed in those with high PSA. The results suggest that engaging in high levels of PSA may be an important lifestyle factor that can help to diminish WMH lesion load in old age, potentially reducing the impact of brain aging.

Highlights

  • Healthy aging is associated with increases in white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volumes on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that are thought to preferentially impact frontal and deep periventricular brain regions (Holland et al, 2008; Marquine et al, 2010)

  • Follow-up simple effects analyses indicated that the OO group with low Physical sports activity (PSA) had significantly greater WMH volume than both the OO with high PSA (F(1,189) = 9.38, p = 0.003) and the YO with low PSA (F(1,189) = 74.62, p = 2.37 E-15)

  • We observed no difference between YO participants with low and high PSA which further suggests that the main impact of WMH volume accumulation in otherwise healthy older adults occurs to a greater extent in the eighth and ninth decades

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Summary

Introduction

Healthy aging is associated with increases in white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volumes on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that are thought to preferentially impact frontal and deep periventricular brain regions (Holland et al, 2008; Marquine et al, 2010). Using a sample of 7,148 middle-aged to older adults ages 45–80 from the UK Biobank, Raichlen et al (2019) found that both MVPA and CRF were inversely associated with WMH lesion load after controlling for age, sex, and cardiovascular risk factors. Together, these findings suggest that MVPA may have beneficial effects on the aging brain aside from those related to cardiovascular health, including the reduction of WM lesion load (Raichlen et al, 2019). Whether age and PA among older adults interact to influence total and regional WMH volumes in healthy aging, has yet to be fully investigated

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