Sex Differences in the Neurovascular Health of Aging Adults

Bibliographic Details
Title: Sex Differences in the Neurovascular Health of Aging Adults
Authors: Bethany L. Sussman, Hannah E. Wiseman, Sudarshan Ranganathan, K. Austin Davis, Botian Xu, Raul Vintimilla, John C. Wood, Caroline A. Rickards, Niema M. Pahlevan, Kevin S. King, Matthew T. Borzage, Meredith Braskie, Kevin King, James R Hall, Melissa Petersen, Raymond Palmer, Robert Barber, Yonggang Shi, Fan Zhang, Rajesh Nandy, Roderick McColl, David Mason, Bradley Christian, Nicole Phillips, Stephanie Large, Joe Lee, Badri Vardarajan, Monica Rivera Mindt, Amrita Cheema, Lisa Barnes, Mark Mapstone, Annie Cohen, Amy Kind, Ozioma Okonkwo, Zhengyang Zhou, Michael Donohue, Rema Raman, Matthew Borzage, Michelle Mielke, Beau Ances, Ganesh Babulal, Jorge Llibre-Guerra, Carl Hill, Rocky Vig
Source: Stroke. 56:2177-2189
Publisher Information: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Description: BACKGROUND: Poor cerebrovascular reactivity is associated with a higher risk of cerebrovascular disease. The most common method to study cerebrovascular reactivity in aging adults, transcranial Doppler ultrasound, yields measurements in large intracranial arteries, but not in regional brain parenchyma that may be more impaired in some disease processes. Measurements derived from transcranial Doppler ultrasound suggest that there are sex differences in cerebrovascular reactivity for aging adults. We investigated the association between age and sex on cerebrovascular reactivity using blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) magnetic resonance imaging in a representative group of aging adults. METHODS: This cross-sectional study investigated BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity to CO 2 in a representative group of aging adults, 51 to 83 years old. We manipulated end-tidal carbon dioxide with breathing exercises and evaluated changes in 6 brain regions: whole brain, white matter, cortical gray matter, subcortical gray matter, left hippocampus, and right hippocampus. We used 1 linear regression per region to investigate the effects of age, sex, and their interaction on BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity. RESULTS: We report an age-by-sex interaction for all brain regions ( P ≤0.050), except cortical gray matter ( P =0.062). For white matter and subcortical gray matter, female participants trended toward an age-related BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity increase ( P ≤0.058), while male participants did not change with age ( P >0.580). In the whole brain and bilateral hippocampi, the age trends for each sex were in opposite directions but not significant ( P >0.211). We report a main effect of sex (female greater than male participants) for subcortical gray matter and the right hippocampus ( P ≤0.048) and no main effect of age in any model. CONCLUSIONS: We present the first report of age-related BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity increases in older female participants and higher BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity in older female compared with male participants. Sex and age-by-sex-based differences seem to be driven by changes in white matter, subcortical gray matter, and bilateral hippocampi.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
ISSN: 1524-4628
0039-2499
DOI: 10.1161/strokeaha.125.051026
Accession Number: edsair.doi...........6e596dd9f225d1ff8263881db6282db7
Database: OpenAIRE
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