Central adiposity is associated with reduced cerebral perfusion: evidence from the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA)
2020
Knight, Silvin | Laird, Eamon | O'Connor, John | Newman, Louise | Kenny, Rose Anne
36% the over 50s in Ireland are obese based on body mass index (BMI: reflective of fat store peripherally) while 52% are ‘centrally obese’ based on waist circumference (indicative of fat located viscerally).⁽¹⁾ Visceral fat is thought to be a major site for inflammatory cytokine production and has been linked to other vascular risk factors such as hypertension and diabetes,⁽²⁾ potentially providing a mechanism for brain atrophy.⁽³⁾ The aim of the present work was to examine associations between obesity and grey matter (GM)/white matter (WM) perfusion as measured using pseudo-continuous arterial spin labelling (pCASL) MRI. This study was embedded within the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA), a nationally representative sample of > 8,000 older adults.⁽⁴⁾ At wave three, 561 participants underwent brain MRI using a 3T scanner (Achieva, Philips, Netherlands); after exclusions, 484 participants data were included for this analysis. Cerebral blood flow (CBF [ml/100g/min]) values were calculated and their associations with BMI and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) measures modelled using multiple linear regression. We also examined 6 groups: ‘normal’, ‘overweight’, and ‘obese’ as defined by BMI, with and without central obesity, as defined by WHR.⁽⁵⁾ Models were adjusted for age, sex, smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity, education, heart disease, hypertension, anti-hypertensive use, and depression. The mean age was 69 years (± 7.2 years); 52% were female. Higher BMI and WHR were both related to lower GM and WM CBF: BMI per 1 SD (GM: β:-1.451, 95%CI:-2.300 to -0.607, P < 0.001; WM: β:-0. 575, 95%CI:-0. 939 to -0.210, P = 0.002) and WHR (GM: β:−1.667, 95%CI:−2.856 to −0.477, P = 0.006; WM: β:−0.688, 95%CI:−1.178 to −0.197, P = 0.006). The combination of overall obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m²) and central obesity (WHR > 0.85[female], > 0.90[male]) was associated with lower CBF (GM: β:-4.303, 95%CI:-7.015 to -1.591, P = 0.002; WM: β:-2.029, 95%CI:-3.185 to -0.873, P < 0.001) compared to subjects without central obesity (GM: β:-0.959, 95%CI:-6.490 to 4.572, P = 0.733; WM:β:-0.051, 95%CI:-2.060 to 1.958, P = 0.960). Our results show that central adiposity is a risk factor for impaired cerebral perfusion independent of BMI. Recent studies have shown that accumulation of fat in this area is a risk factor for cognitive impairment⁽⁶⁾ and thus this study could partly explain the vascular origins.
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