The cortical thickness of tricenarian cocaine users assembles features of an octogenarian brain

Author:

Rothmann Leonardo Melo123,Tondo Lucca Pizzato2,Borelli Wyllians Vendramini2,Esper Nathalia Bianchini4,Portolan Eduardo Tavares25,Franco Alexandre Rosa467,Portuguez Mirna Wetters235,Ferreira Pedro Eugênio2,Bittencourt Augusto Martins Lucas2,Soder Ricardo Bernardi25,Viola Thiago Wendt235,da Costa Jaderson Costa235,Grassi‐Oliveira Rodrigo1235ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Translational Neuropsychiatry Unit, Department of Clinical Medicine, Graduate School of Health Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark

2. Brain Institute (BraIns) Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

3. Graduate Program in Medicine and Health Sciences Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

4. Center for the Developing Brain Child Mind Institute New York New York USA

5. School of Medicine Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

6. Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research Orangeburg New York USA

7. Department of Psychiatric, Grossman School of Medicine New York University New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractIt has been suggested that substance use disorders could lead to accelerated biological aging, but only a few neuroimaging studies have investigated this hypothesis so far. In this cross‐sectional study, structural neuroimaging was performed to measure cortical thickness (CT) in tricenarian adults with cocaine use disorder (CUD, n1 = 30) and their age‐paired controls (YC, n1 = 30), and compare it with octogenarian elder controls (EC, n1 = 20). We found that CT in the right fusiform gyrus was similar between CUD and EC, thinner than the expected values of YC. We also found that regarding CT of the right inferior temporal gyrus, right inferior parietal cortex, and left superior parietal cortex, the CUD group exhibited parameters that fell in between EC and YC groups. Finally, CT of the right pars triangularis bordering with orbitofrontal gyrus, right superior temporal gyrus, and right precentral gyrus were reduced in CUD when contrasted with YC, but those areas were unrelated to CT of EC. Despite the 50‐year age gap between our age groups, CT of tricenarian cocaine users assembles features of an octogenarian brain, reinforcing the accelerated aging hypothesis in CUD.

Funder

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

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3. The incidence of T2‐weighted MR imaging signal abnormalities in the brain of cocaine‐dependent patients is age‐related and region‐specific;Bartzokis G.;American Journal of Neuroradiology,1999

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