AUTHOR=Resende Elisa de Paula França , Rosen Howard J. , Chiang Kevin , Staffaroni Adam M. , Allen Isabel , Grinberg Lea T. , Carmona Karoline Carvalho , Guimarães Henrique Cerqueira , Carvalho Viviane Amaral , Barbosa Maira Tonidandel , de Souza Leonardo Cruz , Caramelli Paulo TITLE=Primary School Education May Be Sufficient to Moderate a Memory-Hippocampal Relationship JOURNAL=Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience VOLUME=10 YEAR=2018 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/aging-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnagi.2018.00381 DOI=10.3389/fnagi.2018.00381 ISSN=1663-4365 ABSTRACT=
According to the cognitive reserve theory, intellectual stimuli acquired during life can prevent against developing cognitive impairment. The underlying cognitive reserve mechanisms were underexplored in low-educated individuals. Because episodic memory impairment due to hippocampal dysfunction is a key feature of Alzheimer’s dementia (AD), we sought to look at a possible cognitive reserve mechanism by determining whether few years of education moderated the relationship between the hippocampal volumes and the episodic-memory scores. The sample was composed by 183 older adults, 40.1% male, with the median age of 78[76,82] years and the median years of education of 4[2,10] who had undergone an episodic-memory test and a 3-Tesla MRI scan to access the hippocampal volumes. Overall, 112 were cognitively healthy, 26 had cognitive impairment-no dementia (CIND) and 45 had dementia. We used multiple linear regression to assess whether the interaction between years of education and each hippocampal volume significantly predicted the episodic-memory scores’ variance, controlling for cognitive diagnosis and nuisance variables. The interaction term with the left hippocampus (ß = 0.2,