Brain and Behavior (Jul 2024)

Evaluating age‐and gender‐related changes in brain volumes in normal adult using synthetic magnetic resonance imaging

  • Zuofeng Zheng,
  • Yawen Liu,
  • Zhenchang Wang,
  • Hongxia Yin,
  • Dongpo Zhang,
  • Jiafei Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.3619
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Objective Normal aging is associated with brain volume change, and brain segmentation can be performed within an acceptable scan time using synthetic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This study aimed to investigate the brain volume changes in healthy adult according to age and gender, and provide age‐ and gender‐specific reference values using synthetic MRI. Methods A total of 300 healthy adults (141 males, median age 48; 159 females, median age 50) were underwent synthetic MRI on 3.0 T. Brain parenchymal volume (BPV), gray matter volume (GMV), white matter volume (WMV), myelin volume (MYV), and cerebrospinal fluid volume (CSFV) were calculated using synthetic MRI software. These volumes were normalized by intracranial volume to normalized GMV (nGMV), normalized WMV (nWMV), normalized MYV (nMYV), normalized BPV (nBPV), and normalized CSFV (nCSFV). The normalized brain volumes were plotted against age in both males and females, and a curve fitting model that best explained the age dependence of brain volume was identified. The normalized brain volumes were compared between different age and gender groups. Results The approximate curves of nGMV, nWMV, nCSFV, nBPV, and nMYV were best fitted by quadratic curves. The nBPV decreased monotonously through all ages in both males and females, while the changes of nCSFV showed the opposite trend. The nWMV and nMYV in both males and females increased gradually and then decrease with age. In early adulthood (20s), nWMV and nMYV in males were lower and peaked later than that in females (p < .005). The nGMV in both males and females decreased in the early adulthood until the 30s and then remains stable. A significant decline in nWMV, nBPV, and nMYV was noted in the 60s (Turkey test, p < .05). Conclusions Our study provides age‐ and gender‐specific reference values of brain volumes using synthetic MRI, which could be objective tools for discriminating brain disorders from healthy brains

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