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Sex Differences in Variability of Brain Structure Across the Lifespan

Natalie J. Forde, Jerrold Jeyachandra, Michael Joseph, Grace R. Jacobs, Erin W. Dickie, Theodore D. Satterthwaite, Russell T. Shinohara, Stephanie H. Ameis, Aristotle N. Voineskos

2020Cerebral Cortex70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Several brain disorders exhibit sex differences in onset, presentation, and prevalence. Increased understanding of the neurobiology of sex-based differences in variability across the lifespan can provide insight into both disease vulnerability and resilience. In n = 3069 participants, from 8 to 95 years of age, we found widespread greater variability in males compared with females in cortical surface area and global and subcortical volumes for discrete brain regions. In contrast, variance in cortical thickness was similar for males and females. These findings were supported by multivariate analysis accounting for structural covariance, and present and stable across the lifespan. Additionally, we examined variability among brain regions by sex. We found significant age-by-sex interactions across neuroimaging metrics, whereby in very early life males had reduced among-region variability compared with females, while in very late life this was reversed. Overall, our findings of greater regional variability, but less among-region variability in males in early life may aid our understanding of sex-based risk for neurodevelopmental disorders. In contrast, our findings in late life may provide a potential sex-based risk mechanism for dementia.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyNeurosciencePsychologyEvolutionary biologyDevelopmental psychologyBirth, Development, and HealthFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesHealth, Environment, Cognitive Aging
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