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Title

Obesity is associated with white matter atrophy: A combined diffusion tensor imaging and voxel-based morphometric study.

Authors

Karlsson, Henry K.; Tuulari, Jetro J.; Hirvonen, Jussi; Lepomäki, Virva; Parkkola, Riitta; Hiltunen, Jaana; Hannukainen, Jarna C.; Soinio, Minna; Pham, Tam; Salminen, Paulina; Nuutila, Pirjo; Nummenmaa, Lauri

Abstract

Objective Little is known about the mechanisms by which obesity influences brain structure. In this study, the obesity-related changes in brain white and gray matter integrity were examined. Design and Methods 23 morbidly obese subjects and 22 nonobese volunteers were studied using voxel-based analysis of diffusion tensor imaging and of T1-weighted MRI images. Full-volume statistical parametric mapping analysis was used to compare fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) values as well as gray (GM) and white matter (WM) density between these groups. Results Obese subjects had lower FA and MD values and lower focal and global GM and WM volumes than control subjects did. The focal structural changes were observed in brain regions governing reward seeking, inhibitory control, and appetite. Regression analysis showed that FA and MD values as well as GM and WM density were negatively associated with body fat percentage. Moreover, the volume of abdominal subcutaneous fat was negatively associated with GM density in most regions. Conclusion These findings imply that changes in GM and WM in obesity may be due to metabolic factors. Atrophy in regions involved in reward processing and appetite control may further promote abnormal reward seeking and eating behavior.

Subjects

WHITE matter (Nerve tissue); OBESITY complications; APPETITE; OVERWEIGHT persons; REGRESSION analysis; DIFFUSION tensor imaging; VOXEL-based morphometry

Publication

Obesity (19307381), 2013, Vol 21, Issue 12, p2530

ISSN

1930-7381

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1002/oby.20386

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