Resting state electroencephalographic rhythms are affected by immediately preceding memory demands in cognitively unimpaired elderly and patients with mild cognitive impairment
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Abstract
Experiments on event-related electroencephalographic oscillations in aged
people typically include blocks of cognitive tasks with a few minutes of
interval between them. The present exploratory study tested the effect of
being engaged on cognitive tasks over the resting state cortical arousal
after task completion, and whether it differs according to the level of the
participant’s cognitive decline. To investigate this issue, we used a local
database including data in 30 healthy cognitively unimpaired (CU) persons
and 40 matched patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI).
They had been involved in 2 memory tasks for about 40 min and underwent
resting-state electroencephalographic (rsEEG) recording after 5 min from the
task end. eLORETA freeware estimated rsEEG alpha source activity as an
index of general cortical arousal. In the CU but not aMCI group, there was
a negative correlation between memory tasks performance and posterior
rsEEG alpha source activity. The better the memory tasks performance,
the lower the posterior alpha activity (i.e., higher cortical arousal). There
was also a negative correlation between neuropsychological test scores of
global cognitive status and alpha source activity. These results suggest that
engagement in memory tasks may perturb background brain arousal for
more than 5 min after the tasks end, and that this effect are dependent on participants global cognitive status. Future studies in CU and aMCI groups may
cross-validate and extend these results with experiments including (1) rsEEG
recordings before memory tasks and (2) post-tasks rsEEG recordings after 5,
15, and 30 min
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Fernández A, Noce G, Del Percio C, Pinal D, Díaz F, Lojo-Seoane C, Zurrón M and Babiloni C (2022) Resting state electroencephalographic rhythms are affected by immediately preceding memory demands in cognitively unimpaired elderly and patients with mild cognitive impairment. Front. Aging Neurosci. 14:907130
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https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2022.907130Sponsors
This study was supported by grants from the Spanish Government, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (PSI2017-
89389-C2-R and PID2020-114521RB-C21/C22); the Galician Government (Xunta de Galicia), Axudas para a Consolidación e Estruturación de Unidades de Investigación Competitivas do Sistema Universitario de Galicia: GRC (GI-1807- USC); Ref: ED431-2017/27 and ED431C-2021/04; all with ERDF/FEDER funds. DP was supported by the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) grant with reference SFRH/BPD/120111/2016. AF was supported by an FPI grant from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación with reference PRE2018-085514
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© 2022 Fernández, Noce, Del Percio, Pinal, Díaz, Lojo-Seoane, Zurrón and Babiloni. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)








