Is sex an influential factor in type-1 diabetes neurofunctional development? A preliminary study.
Andrés Antonio González-GarridoGeisa B Gallardo-MorenoRebeca Romo-VázquezHugo Vélez-PérezAdolfo Flores-Saiffe-FaríasGerardo Mendizabal-RuizStewart R Santos-ArceVanessa D Ruiz-StovelFabiola R Gómez-VelázquezJulieta Ramos-LoyoPublished in: Journal of neuroscience research (2018)
The aim of the study was to evaluate the neurofunctional effect of gender in Type-1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM) patients during a Visual Spatial Working Memory (VSWM) task. The study included 28 participants with ages ranging from 17-28 years. Fourteen well-controlled T1DM patients (7 female) and 14 controls matched by age, sex, and education level were scanned performing a block-design VSWM paradigm. Behavioral descriptive analyses and mean comparisons were done, and between-group and condition functional activation patterns were also compared. Whole-brain cumulative BOLD signal (CumBS), voxel-wise BOLD level frequency, Euclidean distance, and divergence indices were also calculated. There were no significant differences between or within-group sex differences for correct responses and reaction times. Functional activation analyses showed that females had activation in more brain regions, and with larger clusters of cortical activations than males. Furthermore, BOLD activation was higher in males. Despite the preliminary nature of the present study given the relatively small sample size, current results acknowledge for the first time that sex might contribute to differences in functional activation in T1DM patients. Findings suggest that sex differences should be considered when studying T1DM-disease development.