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Aging, gender, and the elderly adult brain: An examination of analytical strategies

✍ Scribed by Daniel L. Greenberg; Denise F. Messer; Martha E. Payne; James R. MacFall; James M. Provenzale; David C. Steffens; Ranga R. Krishnan


Book ID
116781020
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
272 KB
Volume
29
Category
Article
ISSN
0197-4580

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✦ Synopsis


We sought to examine the relations between age, gender and brain volumes in an elderly population; we also sought to examine ways of measuring these relations. Three sets of analyses were used: correlational analyses, in which correlations between independent variables and brain volumes were calculated without correction for intracranial volume (ICV); covariational analyses, in which ICV was used as a covariate in regression equations; and ratio analyses, in which the dependent variable was the ratio of brain volume to ICV. These analyses yielded similar results, except that (as expected) adjusting for ICV altered estimates of gender differences. Analyses of age showed decreases in left caudate, putamen, and right hippocampus and an increase in CSF, a result generally in accord with previous findings. However, we also found a significant decrease of white-matter volumes and no significant decrease in total gray-matter volumes. Correlational analyses showed that men did not always have larger volumes despite their larger head size; women generally had larger volumes after adjusting for ICV. We found no age-gender interactions.


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