Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience (Jun 2024)

MRI morphometry of the anterior and posterior cerebellar vermis and its relationship to sensorimotor and cognitive functions in children

  • Elizabeth A. Hodgdon,
  • Ryan Anderson,
  • Hussein Al Azzawi,
  • Tony W. Wilson,
  • Vince D. Calhoun,
  • Yu-Ping Wang,
  • Isabel Solis,
  • Douglas N. Greve,
  • Julia M. Stephen,
  • Kristina T.R. Ciesielski

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67
p. 101385

Abstract

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Introduction: The human cerebellum emerges as a posterior brain structure integrating neural networks for sensorimotor, cognitive, and emotional processing across the lifespan. Developmental studies of the cerebellar anatomy and function are scant. We examine age-dependent MRI morphometry of the anterior cerebellar vermis, lobules I-V and posterior neocortical lobules VI-VII and their relationship to sensorimotor and cognitive functions. Methods: Typically developing children (TDC; n=38; age 9–15) and healthy adults (HAC; n=31; 18–40) participated in high-resolution MRI. Rigorous anatomically informed morphometry of the vermis lobules I-V and VI-VII and total brain volume (TBV) employed manual segmentation computer-assisted FreeSurfer Image Analysis Program [http://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu]. The neuropsychological scores (WASI-II) were normalized and related to volumes of anterior, posterior vermis, and TBV. Results: TBVs were age independent. Volumes of I-V and VI-VII were significantly reduced in TDC. The ratio of VI-VII to I-V (∼60%) was stable across age-groups; I-V correlated with visual-spatial-motor skills; VI-VII with verbal, visual-abstract and FSIQ. Conclusions: In TDC neither anterior I-V nor posterior VI-VII vermis attained adult volumes. The ''inverted U'' developmental trajectory of gray matter peaking in adolescence does not explain this finding. The hypothesis of protracted development of oligodendrocyte/myelination is suggested as a contributor to TDC's lower cerebellar vermis volumes.

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