Relationships between Cerebral Blood Flow and Cognition in Young Adults born Very Preterm and at Term

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The mechanisms underpinning persistent cognitive challenges in young adults born very preterm (VP;<32 weeks’ gestation) are unclear, but may include altered cerebral blood flow (CBF). We explored whether CBF differed between adults born VP and at term, and the associations between CBF and cognitive outcomes. Seventy-two participants born VP and 16 term-born controls born in Victoria, Australia, completed Arterial Spin Labelling-MRI and a neuropsychological assessment at 20 years of age. Using a voxel-wise general linear model, we analyzed CBF differences between VP and term-born individuals, and the relationships between CBF and cognitive outcomes. Adults born VP displayed lower CBF in several subcortical regions compared with their term-born peers. For both birth groups combined, CBF was positively associated with verbal delayed memory, and negatively associated with aspects of executive functioning across various brain regions. Compared with the VP group, term-born adults exhibited stronger negative relationships between CBF and IQ, receptive language, and aspects of executive functioning. Few CBF-cognition relationships were observed in the VP group and when present, were positive. Overall, adults born VP exhibited lower CBF in subcortical regions with CBF-cognition relationships in opposite directions across VP and term groups. These disparities may reflect cerebral dysmaturation in the VP group.

Article activity feed