Women’s brains are
four years younger than men’s, study finds
Analysis of metabolic brain age may explain
differences in cognitive decline rate.
Ian Sample Science editor
@iansample
Mon 4 Feb 2019 20.00 GMT
Women’s brains are nearly four years younger
than men’s, at least in how they burn fuel, according to scans performed by US
researchers.
Scientists found that healthy women have a
“metabolic brain age” that is persistently younger than men’s of the same
chronological age. The difference is apparent from early adulthood and remains
into old age.
The finding suggests that changes in how the
brain uses energy over a person’s lifetime proceed more gradually in women than
they do in men. While researchers are unsure of the medical consequences, it
may help explain why women tend to stay mentally sharp for longer.
“Brain metabolism changes with age but what we
noticed is that a good deal
of the variation we see is down to sex differences,” said Marcus Raichle, a
neurobiologist at Washington University school of medicine in St Louis. “If you
look at how brain metabolism predicts a person’s age, women come out looking
about four years younger than they are.”
A good deal: An
indefinite amount, extent, or degree (esp in the phrases good or great deal)
(una bon part / una buena parte)
The scientists used a brain scanning technique
called positron emission tomography to measure the flow of oxygen and glucose
in the brains of 121 women and 84 men aged 20 to 82. The scans revealed how
sugar was being turned into energy in different parts of the volunteers’
brains.
In babies and young children, a process called
aerobic glycolysis is increased to grow and mature the developing brain. It is
scaled down in adolescents and young adults, then drops steadily in older
people until it reaches a very low level by the time people reach their 60s.
To see how brain metabolism differed between
the sexes, the researchers used a computer algorithm to predict people’s ages
based on brain metabolism as measured by the scans. First, the scientists
taught it to predict men’s ages from metabolism data gleaned from the male
brain scans.
The striking result came when the scientists
fed metabolism data from the women into the same program. While the program
estimated male ages accurately, it judged the women’s brains to be, on average,
3.8 years younger than their real ages.
The scientists then flipped the analysis around. They trained the algorithm to predict women’s ages
from data garnered from their brain scans. This time, when they fed metabolism
data from the men into the computer, it estimated them to be 2.4 years older
than they were. The way male brains burned sugar made them seem older than
female ones of the same age.
Flip around: To turn
end for end, all the way around, quickly. (donar la
volta / dar la vuelta)
“The great mystery is why,” said Raichle. The
researchers suspect something other than hormonal differences are at work
because the difference in metabolism stays the same when women enter the
menopause.
“I refer to things like this as the curve balls
of Mother Nature,” said Raichle. “Maybe women start off with this difference
and it’s perpetuated throughout life.”
It is not clear what the difference means. The
scientists are keen to investigate whether people with low glucose metabolism
in particular parts of the brain are more prone to memory loss, learning
problems and neurodegenerative diseases as they age.
“Is lower metabolism in such and such an area
predictive of a particular event down the road? We don’t know,” said Raichle.
“But if aerobic glycolysis is protective in some way, and the brain loses some
element of it, that could be a problem.” Details of the study are reported in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Mani Goyal at the university’s Mallinckrodt
Institute of Radiology and first author on the paper, said men’s brains were
not ageing faster than women’s. “They start adulthood about three years older
than women and that persists throughout life,” he said. “What we don’t know is
what it means. I think this could mean that the reason women don’t experience
as much cognitive decline in later years is because their brains are
effectively younger.”
Cap comentari:
Publica un comentari a l'entrada