Impact of Weight Loss on Brain Age: Improved Brain Health Following Bariatric Surgery
Auteurs : Yashar Zeighami, Mahsa Dadar, Justine Daoust, Melissa Pelletier, Laurent Biertho, Leonie Bouvet-Bouchard, Stephanie Fulton, Andre Tchernof, Alain Dagher, Denis Richard, Alan Evans, Andreanne Michaud
Résumé : Overweight and obese individuals tend to have increased brain age, reflecting poorer brain health likely due to grey and white matter atrophy related to obesity. However, it is unclear if older brain age associated with obesity can be reversed following weight loss and cardiometabolic health improvement. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of weight loss and cardiometabolic improvement following bariatric surgery on brain health, as measured by change in brain age estimated based on voxel-based morphometry (VBM). We used three datasets: 1) CamCAN to train the brain age prediction model, 2) Human Connectome Project to investigate whether individuals with obesity have greater brain age than individuals with normal weight, and 3) pre-surgery, as well as 4, 12, and 24 month post-surgery data from participants (n=87) who underwent a bariatric surgery to investigate whether weight loss and cardiometabolic improvement as a result of bariatric surgery lowers the brain age. Our results from the HCP dataset showed a higher brain age for individuals with obesity compared to individuals with normal weight (p<0.0001). We also found significant improvement in brain health, indicated by a decrease of 2.9 and 5.6 years in adjusted delta age at 12 and 24 months following bariatric surgery compared to baseline (p<0.0005). While the overall effect seemed to be driven by a global change across all brain regions and not from a specific region, our exploratory analysis showed lower delta age in certain brain regions at 24 months. This reduced age was also associated with post-surgery improvements in BMI, systolic/diastolic blood pressure, and HOMA-IR (p<0.05). In conclusion, these results suggest that obesity-related brain health abnormalities might be reversed by bariatric surgery-induced weight loss and widespread improvements in cardiometabolic alterations.
Explorez l'arbre d'article
Cliquez sur les nœuds de l'arborescence pour être redirigé vers un article donné et accéder à leurs résumés et assistant virtuel
Recherchez des articles similaires (en version bêta)
En cliquant sur le bouton ci-dessus, notre algorithme analysera tous les articles de notre base de données pour trouver le plus proche en fonction du contenu des articles complets et pas seulement des métadonnées. Veuillez noter que cela ne fonctionne que pour les articles pour lesquels nous avons généré des résumés et que vous pouvez le réexécuter de temps en temps pour obtenir un résultat plus précis pendant que notre base de données s'agrandit.