White matter fractional anisotropy is inversely related to anxious symptoms in older adults with atherosclerosis.

Kelly R Bijanki, Ashley N Stillman, Stephan Arndt, Vincent A Magnotta, Jess G Fiedorowicz, William G Haynes, Joy T Matsui, Hans J Johnson, David J Moser
Author Information
  1. Kelly R Bijanki: Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Clinical anxiety disorders are associated with white matter hyperintensities and diffusion abnormalities measured using diffusion tensor imaging. However, it is not known if this association extends into individuals with mild anxious symptoms without formal diagnosis, in those who are older, or in those who have atherosclerosis. The current study explores whether white matter integrity and/or organization significantly associates with anxious symptoms in older adults with and without atherosclerosis.
METHODS: We recruited older adults (ages 55-90 years); 35 with clinically diagnosed atherosclerotic vascular disease (AVD) and 22 without AVD. Anxious symptoms were measured using the validated Symptom Checklist-90-Revised. Fractional anisotropy (FA), a proxy for white matter organization and health, was measured in the white matter globally, by lobe, and in several smaller regions of interest suggested by the literature. Partial correlations between anxious symptoms and FA were calculated, controlling for significant covariates.
RESULTS: Participants with and without AVD did not differ in severity of anxious symptom endorsement. There was a unique inverse relationship between white matter health and anxious symptoms in the AVD participants, but not in healthy comparisons. Significant relationships were observed in the superior longitudinal fasciculus (r = -0.476, df = 32, p = 0.004), as well as the cingulum bundle, the frontal lobes, and the parietal lobes.
CONCLUSIONS: Anxiety symptoms uniquely correlated with low FA in older adults with atherosclerosis. These findings may have implications for future research on the topic of anxiety in aging and vascular disease and warrant replication.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. R01 AG030417/United States
  2. 1 K23 AG020649-01A1/United States
  3. U54 EB005149/United States
  4. R01AG030417-01A2/United States
  5. UL1 TR000442/United States
  6. K23 AG020649/United States
  7. R01 NS050568/United States
  8. UL1RR024979/United States
  9. UL1 RR024979/United States

MeSH Term

Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Aging
Analysis of Variance
Anisotropy
Anxiety Disorders
Atherosclerosis
Brain
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0symptomsmatteranxiouswhiteolderwithoutatherosclerosisadultsAVDanxietydiffusionmeasuredFAusingtensorimagingorganizationvasculardiseaseanisotropyhealthlongitudinalfasciculuscingulumlobesOBJECTIVE:ClinicaldisordersassociatedhyperintensitiesabnormalitiesHoweverknownassociationextendsindividualsmildformaldiagnosiscurrentstudyexploreswhetherintegrityand/orsignificantlyassociatesMETHODS:recruitedages55-90 years35clinicallydiagnosedatherosclerotic22AnxiousvalidatedSymptomChecklist-90-RevisedFractionalproxygloballylobeseveralsmallerregionsinterestsuggestedliteraturePartialcorrelationscalculatedcontrollingsignificantcovariatesRESULTS:ParticipantsdifferseveritysymptomendorsementuniqueinverserelationshipparticipantshealthycomparisonsSignificantrelationshipsobservedsuperiorr = -0476df = 32p = 0004wellbundlefrontalparietalCONCLUSIONS:AnxietyuniquelycorrelatedlowfindingsmayimplicationsfutureresearchtopicagingwarrantreplicationWhitefractionalinverselyrelateduncinate

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