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How Do We Motorically Resonate in Aging? A Compensatory Role of Prefrontal Cortex

  • Sonia Di Tella
  • , Valeria Blasi
  • , Monia Cabinio
  • , Niels Bergsland
  • , Giovanni Buccino
  • , Francesca Baglio
  • IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi - Milano
  • Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
  • Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aging is the major risk factor for chronic age-related neurological diseases such as neurodegenerative disorders and neurovascular injuries. Exploiting the multimodal nature of the Mirror Neuron System (MNS), rehabilitative interventions have been proposed based on motor-resonance mechanisms in recent years. Despite the considerable evidence of the MNS’ functionality in young adults, further investigation of the action-observation matching system is required in aging, where well-known structural and functional brain changes occur. Twenty-one healthy young adults (mean age 26.66y) and 19 healthy elderly participants (mean age 71.47y) underwent a single MRI evaluation including a T1-3D high-resolution and functional MRI (fMRI) with mirror task. Morphological and functional BOLD data were derived from MRI images to highlight cortical activations associated with the task; to detect differences between the two groups (Young, Elderly) in the two MRI indexes (BOLD and thickness z-scores) using mixed factorial ANOVA (GroupIndex analyses); and to investigate the presence of different cortical lateralization of the BOLD signal in the two groups. In the entire sample, the activation of a bilateral MNS fronto-parietal network was highlighted. The mixed ANOVA (pFDR-corr < 0.05) revealed significant interactions between BOLD signal and cortical thickness in left dorsal premotor cortex, right ventral premotor and prefrontal cortices. A different cortical lateralization of the BOLD signal in frontal lobe activity between groups was also found. Data herein reported suggest that age-related cortical thinning of the MNS is coupled with increased interhemispheric symmetry along with premotor and prefrontal cortex recruitment. These physiological changes of MNS resemble the aging of the motor and cognitive neural systems, suggesting specific but also common aging and compensatory mechanisms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number694676
JournalFrontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 29 2021

Keywords

  • aging
  • magnetic resonance image
  • mirror neuron system
  • prefrontal cortex
  • premotor cortex
  • rehabilitation
  • stroke

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