Similar neural pathways link psychological stress and brain-age in health and multiple sclerosis
Autor/innen
- M.A. Schulz
- S. Hetzer
- F. Eitel
- S. Asseyer
- L. Meyer-Arndt
- T. Schmitz-Hübsch
- J. Bellmann-Strobl
- J.H. Cole
- S.M. Gold
- F. Paul
- K. Ritter
- M. Weygandt
Journal
- iScience
Quellenangabe
- iScience 26 (9): 107679
Zusammenfassung
Clinical and neuroscientific studies suggest a link between psychological stress and reduced brain health in health and neurological disease but it is unclear whether mediating pathways are similar. Consequently, we applied an arterial-spin-labeling MRI stress task in 42 healthy persons and 56 with multiple sclerosis, and investigated regional neural stress responses, associations between functional connectivity of stress-responsive regions and the brain-age prediction error, a highly sensitive machine learning brain health biomarker, and regional brain-age constituents in both groups. Stress responsivity did not differ between groups. Although elevated brain-age prediction errors indicated worse brain health in patients, anterior insula–occipital cortex (healthy persons: occipital pole; patients: fusiform gyrus) functional connectivity correlated with brain-age prediction errors in both groups. Finally, also gray matter contributed similarly to regional brain-age across groups. These findings might suggest a common stress–brain health pathway whose impact is amplified in multiple sclerosis by disease-specific vulnerability factors.