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Published in: Brain Structure and Function 2/2021

01-03-2021 | Alzheimer's Disease | Original Article

Poorer clinical outcomes for older adult monolinguals when matched to bilinguals on brain health

Authors: Matthias Berkes, Noelia Calvo, John A. E. Anderson, Ellen Bialystok, for the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative

Published in: Brain Structure and Function | Issue 2/2021

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Abstract

Previous studies have reported bilingualism to be a proxy of cognitive reserve (CR) based on evidence that bilinguals express dementia symptoms ~ 4 years later than monolinguals yet present with greater neuropathology at time of diagnosis when clinical levels are similar. The current study provides new evidence supporting bilingualism’s contribution to CR using a novel brain health matching paradigm. Forty cognitively normal bilinguals with diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance images recruited from the community were matched with monolinguals drawn from a pool of 165 individuals in the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) database. White matter integrity was determined for all participants using fractional anisotropy, axial diffusivity, and radial diffusivity scores. Propensity scores were obtained using white matter measures, sex, age, and education as predictive covariates, and then used in one-to-one matching between language groups, creating a matched sample of 32 participants per group. Matched monolinguals had poorer clinical diagnoses than that predicted by chance from a theoretical null distribution, and poorer cognitive performances than matched bilinguals as measured by scores on the MMSE. The findings provide support for the interpretation that bilingualism acts as a proxy of CR such that monolinguals have poorer clinical and cognitive outcomes than bilinguals for similar levels of white matter integrity even before clinical symptoms appear.
Literature
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go back to reference Dijkstra T (2005) Bilingual word recognition and lexical access. In: Kroll JF, De Groot AMB (eds) Handbook of bilingualism: Psycholinguistic approaches. Oxford University Press, New York, pp 179–201 Dijkstra T (2005) Bilingual word recognition and lexical access. In: Kroll JF, De Groot AMB (eds) Handbook of bilingualism: Psycholinguistic approaches. Oxford University Press, New York, pp 179–201
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Metadata
Title
Poorer clinical outcomes for older adult monolinguals when matched to bilinguals on brain health
Authors
Matthias Berkes
Noelia Calvo
John A. E. Anderson
Ellen Bialystok
for the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative
Publication date
01-03-2021
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Brain Structure and Function / Issue 2/2021
Print ISSN: 1863-2653
Electronic ISSN: 1863-2661
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00429-020-02185-5

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