Abstract
Age-related increases and decreases have been described in cortical dendritic neuropil. Here, we examine age-related changes in the basilar dendrites of supragranular pyramidal cells in human superior temporal gyrus (i.e., Wernicke's area) of left and right hemispheres. Tissue was obtained from 20 neurologically normal right-handers from 18-79 years: 10 males (Mage = 52.2 years; SDage = 17.4) and 10 females (Mage = 47.8; SDage = 20.5). In tissue prepared by a modified rapid Golgi technique, 10 pyramidal cells were sampled from each hemisphere and evaluated according to the following parameters: total dendritic length, mean dendritic length, and dendritic segment count.
Despite considerable interindividual variation, the data exhibited
significant dendritic degeneration with aging. There was an age-related decrease
in total dendritic length (r[20] = -0.44; p < 0.05) and especially in mean
dendritic length (r[20] = -0.69; p < 0.001) with increasing age. Age-mean
dendritic length correlations were negative for all segment orders and revealed
a progressive decrease in segment length in more distal branches. The number
of dendritic segments remained relatively stable across the age span sampled.
The data also indicated that interhemispheric dendritic asymmetries decreased
with age. Individuals under 50 years of age had significantly greater total
dendritic length values in the left hemisphere. Interhemispheric dendritic differences
were not significant in individuals over 50.
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