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Level of education mitigates the impact of tau pathology on neuronal function

Authors :
Hoenig, Merle C.
Bischof, Gerard N.
Onur, Ozgur A.
Kukolja, Juraj
Jessen, Frank
Fliessbach, Klaus
Neumaier, Bernd
Fink, Gereon R.
Kalbe, Elke
Drzezga, Alexander
van Eimeren, Thilo
Hoenig, Merle C.
Bischof, Gerard N.
Onur, Ozgur A.
Kukolja, Juraj
Jessen, Frank
Fliessbach, Klaus
Neumaier, Bernd
Fink, Gereon R.
Kalbe, Elke
Drzezga, Alexander
van Eimeren, Thilo
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

PurposeUsing PET imaging in a group of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), we investigated whether level of education, a proxy for resilience, mitigates the harmful impact of tau pathology on neuronal function.MethodsWe included 38 patients with mild-to-moderate AD (mean age 677years, mean MMSE score 244, mean years of education 14 +/- 4; 20 men, 18 women) in whom a [F-18]AV-1451 scan (a measure of tau pathology) and an [F-18]FDG scan (a measure of neuronal function) were available. The preprocessed PET scans were z-transformed using templates for [F-18]AV-1451 and [F-18]FDG from healthy controls, and subsequently thresholded at a z-score of >= 3.0, representing an one-tailed p value of 0.001. Next, three volumes were computed in each patient: the tau-specific volume (tau pathology without neuronal dysfunction), the FDG-specific volume (neuronal dysfunction without tau pathology), and the overlap volume (tau pathology and neuronal dysfunction). Mean z-scores and volumes were extracted and used as dependent variables in regression analysis with years of education as predictor, and age and MMSE score as covariates.Results Years of education were positively associated with tau-specific volume (beta=0.362, p=0.022), suggesting a lower impact of tau pathology on neuronal function in patients with higher levels of education. Concomitantly, level of education was positively related to tau burden in the overlap volume (beta=0.303, p=0.036) implying that with higher levels of education more tau pathology is necessary to induce neuronal dysfunction.Conclusion In patients with higher levels of education, tau pathology is less paralleled by regional and remote neuronal dysfunction. The data suggest that early life-time factors such as level of education support resilience mechanisms, which ameliorate AD-related effects later in life.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1201314300
Document Type :
Electronic Resource