%0 Journal Article %A García-Casares, Natalia %A Berthier, Marcelo L %A Jorge, Ricardo E %A González-Alegre, Pedro %A Gutiérrez Cardo, Antonio %A Rioja Villodres, José %A Ación, Laura %A Ariza Corbo, María José %A Nabrozidis, Alejandro %A García-Arnés, Juan A %A González-Santos, Pedro %T Structural and functional brain changes in middle-aged type 2 diabetic patients: a cross-sectional study. %D 2014 %@ 1387-2877 %U http://hdl.handle.net/10668/1712 %X BACKGROUNDType 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is an emerging risk factor for cognitive impairment. Whether this impairment is a direct effect of this metabolic disorder on brain function, a consequence of vascular disease, or both, remains unknown. Structural and functional neuroimaging studies in patients with T2DM could help to elucidate this question.OBJECTIVEWe designed a cross-sectional study comparing 25 T2DM patients with 25 age- and gender-matched healthy control participants. Clinical information, APOE genotype, lipid and glucose analysis, structural cerebral magnetic resonance imaging including voxel-based morphometry, and F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography were obtained in all subjects.METHODSGray matter densities and metabolic differences between groups were analyzed using statistical parametric mapping. In addition to comparing the neuroimaging profiles of both groups, we correlated neuroimaging findings with HbA1c levels, duration of T2DM, and insulin resistance measurement (HOMA-IR) in the diabetic patients group. Results: Patients with T2DM presented reduced gray matter densities and reduced cerebral glucose metabolism in several fronto-temporal brain regions after controlling for various vascular risk factors. Furthermore, within the T2DM group, longer disease duration, and higher HbA1c levels and HOMA-IR were associated with lower gray matter density and reduced cerebral glucose metabolism in fronto-temporal regions.CONCLUSIONIn agreement with previous reports, our findings indicate that T2DM leads to structural and metabolic abnormalities in fronto-temporal areas. Furthermore, they suggest that these abnormalities are not entirely explained by the role of T2DM as a cardiovascular risk factor. %K Cognition %K Magnetic resonance imaging %K Neuroimaging %K Positron emission tomography %K Type 2 diabetes mellitus %K Diabetes mellitus tipo 2 %K Trastornos cognitivos %K Trastornos del metabolismo de la glucosa %K Enfermedades Vasculares %K Neuroimagen %K Imagen por resonancia magnética %K Tomografía de emisión de positrones %K Lóbulo temporal %~