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Word retrieval decline in midlife: a voxel-based morphometry study

Abstract

There is currently little understanding on whether significant word retrieval difficulties appear during midlife and ifso, whether they relate to decrease in grey matter (GM) density that accompanies aging. To answer this question, we studiedretrieval of proper names in 125 cognitively healthy middle-aged persons (49.7, ±3.2) comparing their performance on atip-of-the-tongue (TOT) task with that of 86 young persons (25.4, ±3.5) from the Cam-Can data repository (http://www.mrc-cbu.cam.ac.uk/datasets/camcan/). The middle age (MA) group was worse in word retrieval (U = 23950.5, p = 0.003) and hadless GM volume in a range of left fronto-temporal areas relative to the young group, but there were no statistically significantcorrelations between volumes of the regions known to be implicated in word retrieval and MA’s TOT scores. Thus, midlifeword retrieval decline is not associated with GM volume reduction; more likely it is due to changes in connectivity.

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