Reduced structural connectivity of the medial temporal lobe including the perforant path is associated with aging and verbal memory impairment.

Journal: Neurobiology Of Aging
Published:
Abstract

The perforant path, the white matter bundle connecting the entorhinal cortex (ERC) with the hippocampal formation deteriorates with age-related cognitive decline. Previous investigations using diffusion-weighted MRI to quantify perforant path integrity in-vivo have been limited due to image resolution or have quantified the perforant path using methods susceptible to partial volume effects such as the tensor model and without consideration of its 3-dimensional morphology. In this investigation, we use quantitative-anisotropy informed tractography derived from ultra-high resolution diffusion imaging (ZOOMit) to investigate structural connectivity of the perforant path and other medial temporal lobe (MTL) pathways in older adults (63 to 98 years old, n = 51). We show that graph density within the MTL declines with age and is associated with lower delayed recall performance. We also show that older age and poorer delayed recall are associated with reduced streamlines connecting the ERC and dentate gyrus of the hippocampus (the putative perforant path). This work suggest that intra-MTL connectivity may new candidate biomarkers for age-related cognitive decline.

Authors
Steven Granger, Luis Colon Perez, Myra Larson, Ilana Bennett, Michael Phelan, David Keator, John Janecek, Mithra Sathishkumar, Anna Smith, Liv Mcmillan, Dana Greenia, Maria Corrada, Claudia Kawas, Michael Yassa
Relevant Conditions

Memory Loss