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Brain Function Differences in Children With Type 1 Diabetes: A Functional MRI Study of Working Memory.

Citation
Foland-Ross, L. C., et al. “Brain Function Differences In Children With Type 1 Diabetes: A Functional Mri Study Of Working Memory.”. Diabetes, pp. 1770-1778.
Center Yale University
Author Lara C Foland-Ross, Gabby Tong, Nelly Mauras, Allison Cato, Tandy Aye, Michael Tansey, Neil H White, Stuart A Weinzimer, Kimberly Englert, Hanyang Shen, Paul K Mazaika, Allan L Reiss, Diabetes Research in Children Network
Abstract

Glucose is a primary fuel source to the brain, yet the influence of dysglycemia on neurodevelopment in children with type 1 diabetes remains unclear. We examined brain activation using functional MRI in 80 children with type 1 diabetes (mean ± SD age 11.5 ± 1.8 years; 46% female) and 47 children without diabetes (control group) (age 11.8 ± 1.5 years; 51% female) as they performed a visuospatial working memory (N-back) task. Results indicated that in both groups, activation scaled positively with increasing working memory load across many areas, including the frontoparietal cortex, caudate, and cerebellum. Between groups, children with diabetes exhibited reduced performance on the N-back task relative to children in the control group, as well as greater modulation of activation (i.e., showed greater increase in activation with higher working memory load). Post hoc analyses indicated that greater modulation was associated in the diabetes group with better working memory function and with an earlier age of diagnosis. These findings suggest that increased modulation may occur as a compensatory mechanism, helping in part to preserve working memory ability, and further, that children with an earlier onset require additional compensation. Future studies that test whether these patterns change as a function of improved glycemic control are warranted.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Diabetes
Volume
69
Issue
8
Number of Pages
1770-1778
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
1939-327X
DOI
10.2337/db20-0123
Alternate Journal
Diabetes
PMID
32471809
PMCID
PMC7372069
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