Weak correlations between body height and several brain metrics in healthy elderly subjects

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Abstract

The question whether body height is related to different brain size measures has recently gained renewed interest as some studies have reported that body height correlates with intelligence and several brain size measures. In this study, we re-evaluated this question by examining the relationship between body height and different brain size measures including intracranial volume, total brain volume, total cortical surface area, total cortical volume, volume of normal-appearing white matter, white matter hyperintensity, cortical surface area, cortical thickness, subcortical grey matter volume, cerebellar cortex and cerebellar white matter in a relatively large sample (n = 216) of physically and cognitively healthy elderly subjects (mean age 71 years, age range 65–85 years). We identified small correlations (r =.11–.19) between body height and seven out of 10 brain metrics (total brain volume, cortical surface area, cortical volume, subcortical volume, normal-appearing white matter volume and cerebellar grey as well as white matter volumes) when controlling for sex and age. Based on these small relationships between body height and various brain size measures, we discuss the possible reasons and theoretical problems for these small relationships.

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APA

Jäncke, L., Liem, F., & Merillat, S. (2019). Weak correlations between body height and several brain metrics in healthy elderly subjects. European Journal of Neuroscience, 50(10), 3578–3589. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.14501

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