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Open AccessJournal Article

Age-Related Total Gray Matter and White Matter Changes in Normal Adult Brain. Part I: Volumetric MR Imaging Analysis

TLDR
Quantitative analysis of GM and WM volumes can improve the understanding of brain atrophy due to normal aging; this knowledge may be valuable in distinguishing atrophy of disease patterns from characteristics of the normal aging process.
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Motor Control and Aging: Links to Age-Related Brain Structural, Functional, and Biochemical Effects

TL;DR: In general, older adults exhibit involvement of more widespread brain regions for motor control than young adults, particularly the prefrontal cortex and basal ganglia networks, resulting in an imbalance of "supply and demand".
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Integrating evidence from neuroimaging and neuropsychological studies of obsessive-compulsive disorder: The orbitofronto-striatal model revisited

TL;DR: A quantitative, voxel-level meta-analysis of functional MRI findings revealed consistent abnormalities in orbitofronto-striatal and other additional areas in OCD, which is considered a timely assessment of neuroimaging findings to date.
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Age-related myelin breakdown: a developmental model of cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease

TL;DR: A hypothetical model of Alzheimer's disease as a uniquely human brain disorder rooted in its exceptional process of myelination is presented, offering a framework that explains the anatomical distribution and progressive course of AD pathology, some of the failures of promising therapeutic interventions, and suggests further testable hypotheses as well as novel approaches for intervention efforts.
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A meta-analysis of sex differences in human brain structure

TL;DR: This is the first meta-analysis of sex differences in the typical human brain and regional sex differences overlap with areas implicated in psychiatric conditions.
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Microbiota and neurodevelopmental windows: implications for brain disorders

TL;DR: The concept of parallel and interacting microbial-neural critical windows opens new avenues for developing novel microbiota-modulating based therapeutic interventions in early life to combat neurodevelopmental deficits and brain disorders.
References
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Pathologic correlates of incidental MRI white matter signal hyperintensities

TL;DR: The histopathologic changes associated with incidental white matter signal hyperintensities on MRIs from 11 elderly patients are related to a descriptive classification for such abnormalities, and this classification appears to reflect both the different etiologies and severities of incidental MRI signal abnormalities, if it is modified to treat irregular periventricular and confluent deep white matter hyperintENSities together.
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A quantitative magnetic resonance imaging study of changes in brain morphology from infancy to late adulthood.

TL;DR: These patterns of growth and change seen in vivo with MRI are largely consistent with neuropathological studies, as well as animal models of development, and may reflect neuronal progressive and regressive processes, including cell growth, myelination, cell death, and atrophy.
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Selective aging of the human cerebral cortex observed in vivo: differential vulnerability of the prefrontal gray matter.

TL;DR: Small but consistent rightward asymmetry was found in the whole cerebral hemispheres, superior parietal, fusiform and orbito-frontal cortices, postcentral and prefrontal white matter, and in the parietal white matter.
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Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Human Brain Development: Ages 4–18

TL;DR: Findings highlight gender-specific maturational changes of the developing brain and the need for large gender-matched samples in pediatric neuropsychiatric studies.
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Normal brain development and aging: quantitative analysis at in vivo MR imaging in healthy volunteers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantitatively quantitate neuroanatomic parameters in healthy volunteers and compare the values with normative values from postmortem studies, using MRI images of 116 volunteers aged 19 months to 80 years.
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