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Contributions of cerebral white matter hyperintensities, age, and pedal perception to postural sway in people living with HIV.
AIDS 2024 March 28
OBJECTIVE: With aging, people living with HIV (PLWH) have diminishing postural stability that increases liability for falls. Factors and neuromechanisms contributing to instability are incompletely known. Brain white matter abnormalities seen as hyperintense (WMH) signals have been considered to underlie instability in normal aging and PLWH. We questioned whether sway-WMH relations endured after accounting for potentially relevant demographic, physiological, and HIV-related variables.
DESIGN: Mixed cross-sectional/longitudinal data acquired over 15 years in 141 PLWH and 102 age-range matched controls, 25-80 years old.
METHODS: Multimodal structural MRI data were quantified for 7 total and regional WMH volumes. Static posturography acquired with a force platform measured sway path length separately with eyes closed and eyes open. Statistical analyses used multiple regression with mixed modeling to test contributions from non-MRI and non-path data on sway path-WMH relations.
RESULTS: In simple correlations, longer sway paths were associated with larger WMH volumes in PWLH and controls. When demographic, physiological, and HIV-related variables were entered into multiple regressions, the sway-WMH relations under both vision conditions in the controls were attenuated when accounting for age and 2-point pedal discrimination. Although the sway-WMH relations in PLWH were influenced by age, 2-point pedal discrimination, and years with HIV infection, the sway-WMH relations endured for 5 of the 7 regions in the eyes-open condition.
CONCLUSIONS: The constellation of age-related increasing instability while standing, degradation of brain white matter integrity, and peripheral pedal neuropathy is indicative of advancing fraility and liability for falls as people age with HIV infection.
DESIGN: Mixed cross-sectional/longitudinal data acquired over 15 years in 141 PLWH and 102 age-range matched controls, 25-80 years old.
METHODS: Multimodal structural MRI data were quantified for 7 total and regional WMH volumes. Static posturography acquired with a force platform measured sway path length separately with eyes closed and eyes open. Statistical analyses used multiple regression with mixed modeling to test contributions from non-MRI and non-path data on sway path-WMH relations.
RESULTS: In simple correlations, longer sway paths were associated with larger WMH volumes in PWLH and controls. When demographic, physiological, and HIV-related variables were entered into multiple regressions, the sway-WMH relations under both vision conditions in the controls were attenuated when accounting for age and 2-point pedal discrimination. Although the sway-WMH relations in PLWH were influenced by age, 2-point pedal discrimination, and years with HIV infection, the sway-WMH relations endured for 5 of the 7 regions in the eyes-open condition.
CONCLUSIONS: The constellation of age-related increasing instability while standing, degradation of brain white matter integrity, and peripheral pedal neuropathy is indicative of advancing fraility and liability for falls as people age with HIV infection.
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