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Obese Adolescents Show Reduced Cognitive Processing Speed Compared with Healthy Weight Peers

Sweat, Victoria; Yates, Kathy F; Migliaccio, Renee; Convit, Antonio
BACKGROUND: Childhood obesity and obesity-associated diabetes and metabolic syndrome (MetS) continue to rise. Obesity has been linked to structural and functional brain abnormalities, particularly in the frontal lobe. METHODS: One hundred sixty-two adolescents (aged 19.53 +/- 1.53 years) underwent medical, neurocognitive, and brain magnetic resonance imaging assessments. Participants were either healthy weight (BMI <25.0 kg/m2 or BMI percentile <85%) or obese (BMI >/=30.0 kg/m2 or BMI percentile >/=95%). We evaluated frontal lobe cognitive functions and the size of the corpus callosum (CC). RESULTS: Groups differed on four measures of processing speed contained in four different cognitive tests, but not on executive function. A confirmatory factor analysis verified that the significant processing speed variables loaded on the same factor. We also found differences between the weight groups on the area of the anterior portion of the CC, but not the overall CC. Only the Controlled Oral Word Association Test (COWAT) was significantly correlated with the area of the anterior portion of the CC. In the obese group, 32.4% met criteria for MetS. No differences were found between obese participants with or without MetS and none of the MetS factors contributed consistently to cognitive performance. CONCLUSIONS: Obese adolescents show slower cognitive processing speed while maintaining equivalent performance on executive functioning compared with their healthy weight peers. The group differences in the anterior portion of the CC, responsible for frontal lobe interhemispheric communication, may in part explain our processing speed findings. Future studies should include a longitudinal design and diffusion tensor imaging to examine the integrity of white matter.
PMCID:5444419
PMID: 28256922
ISSN: 2153-2176
CID: 2471682

Insulin Sensitivity and Inflammation Mediate the Impact of Fitness on Cerebrovascular Health in Adolescents

Yau, Po Lai; Ross, Naima; Tirsi, Andrew; Arif, Arslan; Ozinci, Zeynep; Convit, Antonio
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: To investigate in adolescents the relationships between retinal vessel diameter, physical fitness, insulin sensitivity, and systemic inflammation. METHODS: We evaluated 157 adolescents, 112 with excessive weight and 45 lean, all without type 2 diabetes mellitus. All received detailed evaluations, including measurements of retinal vessel diameter, insulin sensitivity, levels of inflammation, and physical fitness. RESULTS: Overweight/obese adolescents had significantly narrower retinal arteriolar and wider venular diameters, significantly lower insulin sensitivity, and physical fitness. They also had decreased levels of anti-inflammatory and increased levels of proinflammatory markers as well as an overall higher inflammation balance score. Fitness was associated with larger retinal arteriolar and narrower venular diameters and these relationships were mediated by insulin sensitivity. We demonstrate that inflammation also mediates the relationship between fitness and retinal venular, but not arterial diameter; insulin sensitivity and inflammation balance score jointly mediate this relationship with little overlap in their effects. CONCLUSIONS: Increasing fitness and insulin sensitivity and reducing inflammation among adolescents carrying excess weight may improve microvascular integrity. Interventions to improve physical fitness and insulin function and reduce inflammation in adolescents, a group likely to benefit from such interventions, may reduce not only cardiovascular disease in middle age, but also improve cerebrovascular function later in life.
PMCID:5444422
PMID: 28092457
ISSN: 2153-2176
CID: 2413752

Does Inflammation Mediate the Association Between Obesity and Insulin Resistance?

Adabimohazab, Razieh; Garfinkel, Amanda; Milam, Emily C; Frosch, Olivia; Mangone, Alexander; Convit, Antonio
In adult obesity, low-grade systemic inflammation is considered an important step in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance (IR). The association between obesity and inflammation is less well established in adolescents. Here, we ascertain the importance of inflammation in IR among obese adolescents by utilizing either random forest (RF) classification or mediation analysis approaches. The inflammation balance score, composed of eight pro- and anti-inflammatory makers, as well as most of the individual inflammatory markers differed significantly between lean and overweight/obese. In contrast, adiponectin was the only individual marker selected as a predictor of IR by RF, and the balance score only revealed a medium-to-low importance score. Neither adiponectin nor the inflammation balance score was found to mediate the relationship between obesity and IR. These findings do not support the premise that low-grade systemic inflammation is a key for the expression of IR in the human. Prospective longitudinal studies should confirm these findings.
PMCID:4884488
PMID: 26956471
ISSN: 1573-2576
CID: 2024292

Fitness, insulin sensitivity, and frontal lobe integrity in adults with overweight and obesity

Castro, Mary Grace; Venutolo, Christopher; Yau, Po Lai; Convit, Antonio
OBJECTIVE: To formally test whether insulin sensitivity mediates the relationship between fitness and brain integrity. METHODS: Eighty-four middle-aged participants without diabetes received a 6-min walk test from which maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max) was derived, a structural magnetic resonance scan, and a medical evaluation including fasting glucose and insulin levels. RESULTS: This study showed significant associations between fitness, abdominal obesity, and insulin sensitivity and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) volume as well as between ACC thickness and quantitative insulin-sensitivity check index (QUICKI). The relationship between ACC volume and VO2 max was completely mediated through QUICKI. Further, this strong association was confirmed by a single and very significant cluster on the ACC linking gray matter volume and QUICKI in a voxel-based morphometry analysis. CONCLUSIONS: As expected, increased abdominal obesity was associated with reductions in fitness, ACC volumes, and insulin sensitivity. Importantly, this study demonstrated a significant mediation of the relationship between VO2 max and ACC volume by QUICKI. This suggests that the links between impaired insulin sensitivity and brain abnormalities in adults carrying excess weight could be alleviated through increased physical activity and fitness.
PMCID:4882260
PMID: 27123868
ISSN: 1930-739x
CID: 2092592

Effects of aging on slow-wave sleep dynamics and human spatial navigational memory consolidation

Varga, Andrew W; Ducca, Emma L; Kishi, Akifumi; Fischer, Esther; Parekh, Ankit; Koushyk, Viachaslau; Yau, Po Lai; Gumb, Tyler; Leibert, David P; Wohlleber, Margaret E; Burschtin, Omar E; Convit, Antonio; Rapoport, David M; Osorio, Ricardo S; Ayappa, Indu
The consolidation of spatial navigational memory during sleep is supported by electrophysiological and behavioral evidence. The features of sleep that mediate this ability may change with aging, as percentage of slow-wave sleep is canonically thought to decrease with age, and slow waves are thought to help orchestrate hippocampal-neocortical dialog that supports systems level consolidation. In this study, groups of younger and older subjects performed timed trials before and after polysomnographically recorded sleep on a 3D spatial maze navigational task. Although younger subjects performed better than older subjects at baseline, both groups showed similar improvement across presleep trials. However, younger subjects experienced significant improvement in maze performance during sleep that was not observed in older subjects, without differences in morning psychomotor vigilance between groups. Older subjects had sleep quality marked by decreased amount of slow-wave sleep and increased fragmentation of slow-wave sleep, resulting in decreased slow-wave activity. Across all subjects, frontal slow-wave activity was positively correlated with both overnight change in maze performance and medial prefrontal cortical volume, illuminating a potential neuroanatomical substrate for slow-wave activity changes with aging and underscoring the importance of slow-wave activity in sleep-dependent spatial navigational memory consolidation.
PMCID:4857208
PMID: 27143431
ISSN: 1558-1497
CID: 2100842

Analysis of the MIRIAD Data Shows Sex Differences in Hippocampal Atrophy Progression

Ardekani, Babak A; Convit, Antonio; Bachman, Alvin H
BACKGROUND: Hippocampus (HC) atrophy is a hallmark of early Alzheimer's disease (AD). Atrophy rates can be measured by high-resolution structural MRI. Longitudinal studies have previously shown sex differences in the progression of functional and cognitive deficits and rates of brain atrophy in early AD dementia. It is important to corroborate these findings on independent datasets. OBJECTIVE: To study temporal rates of HC atrophy over a one-year period in probable AD patients and cognitively normal (CN) subjects by longitudinal MRI scans obtained from the Minimal Interval Resonance Imaging in AD (MIRIAD) database. METHODS: We used a novel algorithm to compute an index of hippocampal (structural) integrity (HI) at baseline and one-year follow-up in 43 mild-moderate probable AD patients and 22 CN subjects in MIRIAD. The diagnostic power of longitudinal HI measurement was assessed using a support vector machines (SVM) classifier. RESULTS: The HI was significantly reduced in the AD group (p < 10-20). In addition, the annualized percentage rate of reduction in HI was significantly greater in the AD group (p < 10-13). Within the AD group, the annual reduction of HI in women was significantly greater than in men (p = 0.008). The accuracy of SVM classification between AD and CN subjects was estimated to be 97% by 10-fold cross-validation. CONCLUSION: In the MIRIAD patients with probable AD, the HC atrophies at a significantly faster rate in women as compared to men. Female sex is a risk factor for faster descent into AD. The HI measure has potential for AD diagnosis, as a biomarker of AD progression and a therapeutic target in clinical trials.
PMID: 26836168
ISSN: 1875-8908
CID: 1933102

Outcomes of The BODY Project: A Program to Halt Obesity and Its Medical Consequences in High School Students

Sweat, Victoria; Bruzzese, Jean-Marie; Fierman, Arthur; Mangone, Alexander; Siegel, Carole; Laska, Eugene; Convit, Antonio
Adolescent obesity continues to be a major public health issue with a third of American adolescents being overweight or obese. Excess weight is associated with cardiovascular risk factors and pre-diabetes. High school students identified as carrying excess weight [body mass index (BMI) >/=25 kg/m2, or BMI percentile >/=85 %] were invited to participate in The BODY Project, an intervention that included a medical evaluation and a personalized medical report of the results of that evaluation sent to the parent/guardian at home. The medical evaluation and report was repeated 12 months later. The reports also contained advice on how the individual student could modify their lifestyle to improve the specific medical parameters showing abnormalities. Outcomes were change in BMI, blood pressure, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), low-density lipoprotein (LDL), fasting glucose, and fasting insulin. Students participating in The BODY Project intervention demonstrated modest, yet significant, reductions in BMI (p < 0.001) 1 year later, and also had significant improvements in systolic blood pressure (p < 0.001) and cholesterol profile (HDL p = 0.002; LDL p < 0.001) at follow-up. The BODY Project, by means of a minimal educational program anchored on the principle of teachable moments around the students' increased perception of their own risk for disease from the medical abnormalities uncovered, demonstrates evidence of potential effectiveness in addressing adolescent obesity.
PMID: 26001765
ISSN: 1573-3610
CID: 1591302

Obesity, fitness, and brain integrity in adolescence

Ross, Naima; Yau, Po Lai; Convit, Antonio
OBJECTIVE: We set out to ascertain the relationship between insulin resistance, fitness, and brain structure and function in adolescents. DESIGN AND METHODS: We studied 79 obese and 51 non-obese participants who were recruited from the community, all without type 2 diabetes mellitus. All participants received medical, endocrine, neuropsychological, and MRI evaluations as well as a 6-minute walk test that was used to estimate fitness (maximal oxygen consumption). RESULTS: Obese adolescents had significantly thinner orbitofrontal cortices and performed significantly worse on Visual Working Memory tasks and the Digit Vigilance task. Insulin sensitivity and maximal oxygen consumption (VO2 max) were both highly correlated with central obesity and orbitofrontal cortical thickness, although insulin sensitivity was the stronger predictor for orbitofrontal cortical thickness. We also found that VO2 max was the only significant physiological variable related to visual working memory. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study to report positive associations between insulin resistance, VO2 max, and frontal lobe brain integrity in adolescents. Given the importance of brain health for learning and school performance, we conclude that schools should also emphasize physical fitness in order to maintain structural and functional brain integrity and facilitate academic achievement.
PMCID:4546923
PMID: 25843937
ISSN: 1095-8304
CID: 1571502

Cerebral perfusion in insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes

Rusinek, Henry; Ha, Jenny; Yau, Po Lai; Storey, Pippa; Tirsi, Aziz; Tsui, Wai Hon; Frosch, Olivia; Azova, Svetlana; Convit, Antonio
Cerebral perfusion was evaluated in 87 subjects prospectively enrolled in three study groups-healthy controls (HC), patients with insulin resistance (IR) but not with diabetes, and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Participants received a comprehensive 8-hour clinical evaluation and arterial spin labeling magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In order of decreasing significance, an association was found between cerebral blood flow (CBF) and sex, waist circumference, diastolic blood pressure (BP), end tidal CO2, and verbal fluency score (R2=0.27, F=5.89, P<0.001). Mean gray-matter CBF in IR was 4.4 mL/100 g per minute lower than in control subjects (P=0.005), with no hypoperfusion in T2DM (P=0.312). Subjects with IR also showed no CO2 relationship (slope=-0.012) in the normocapnic range, in contrast to a strong relationship in healthy brains (slope=0.800) and intermediate response (slope=0.445) in diabetic patients. Since the majority of T2DM but few IR subjects were aggressively treated with blood glucose, cholesterol, and BP lowering medications, our finding could be attributed to the beneficial effect of these drugs.Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism advance online publication, 15 October 2014; doi:10.1038/jcbfm.2014.173.
PMCID:4294398
PMID: 25315860
ISSN: 0271-678x
CID: 1307522

Retinal vessel alterations and cerebral white matter microstructural damage in obese adolescents with metabolic syndrome

Yau, Po Lai; Kim, Minsung; Tirsi, Aziz; Convit, Antonio
IMPORTANCE: Cerebral white matter (WM) damage has been reported in childhood obesity and in metabolic syndrome (MetS) but mechanisms remain unclear. OBJECTIVES: To ascertain whether adolescents with MetS have retinal vessel alterations and if the anticipated reductions in retinal arteriolar diameter are associated with diminished cerebral WM microstructural integrity and to test a model for vascular etiology of the WM abnormalities. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional study of the brain correlates of obesity and related metabolic disease in youths. This study was conducted at the Brain, Obesity, and Diabetes Laboratory, New York University School of Medicine, New York. Thirty-nine obese adolescents with MetS and 51 matched adolescents without MetS received comprehensive endocrine, neuropsychological, retinal vessel, and diffusion tensor imaging-based cerebral WM evaluations. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Retinal arteriolar diameter, cerebral WM microstructural integrity, waist circumference, and insulin resistance. RESULTS: Obese adolescents with MetS had significant reductions in retinal arteriolar diameter relative to adolescents without MetS (mean [SD] central retinal arteriolar equivalent, 182.35 [16.10] vs 198.62 [19.03] mum, respectively; P < .001). The greater the number of MetS criteria present, the greater the reduction was in retinal arteriolar diameter (beta = -8.61; r2 = 0.335; F1,83 = 70.79; P < .001). We found that abdominal obesity (waist circumference) was the strongest MetS component related to reductions in retinal arteriolar diameter (rp[85] = -0.661; P < .001), and importantly, for the first time to our knowledge, we demonstrated that its effect was partially mediated by comorbid insulin resistance (indirect effect = -0.1355 [95% CI, -0.2471 to -0.0593]; Z = -2.56; P = .01). Consistent with our prior report of nondiabetic adolescents with MetS, we also uncovered cerebral WM microstructural damage. These subtle WM changes were associated with reductions in retinal arteriolar diameter, a proxy for cerebral microvascular health (3150 voxels or 3.15 cm3; P < .001). Importantly, some of the WM regions showing lower microstructural integrity also demonstrated associations with retinal arteriolar diameter, suggesting that the observed WM pathology is likely vascular in nature. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: We document, for the first time to our knowledge, the associations between retinal vessel alterations and subclinical WM pathology among obese adolescents with MetS. This suggests that the subtle WM pathology in adolescents with MetS may have a vascular origin. Future work should include direct assessments of cerebral microvascular health.
PMCID:4420159
PMID: 25436854
ISSN: 2168-6203
CID: 1369162