Abstract

Background: Depression and loneliness are prevalent and highly correlated phenomena among the elderly and influence both physical and mental health. Brain functional connectivity changes associated with depressive symptoms and loneliness are not fully understood.Methods: A cross-sectional functional MRI study was conducted among 85 non-demented male elders. Geriatric depression scale-short form (GDS) and loneliness scale were used to evaluate the severity of depressive symptoms and loneliness, respectively. Whole brain voxel-wise resting-state functional connectivity density (FCD) mapping was performed to delineate short-range FCD (SFCD) and long-range FCD (LFCD). Regional correlations between depressive symptoms or loneliness and SFCD or LFCD were examined using general linear model (GLM), with age incorporated as a covariate and depressive symptoms and loneliness as predictors.Results: Positive correlations between depressive symptoms and LFCD were observed in left rectal gyrus, left superior frontal gyrus, right supraorbital gyrus, and left inferior temporal gyrus. Positive correlations between depressive symptoms and SFCD were observed in left middle frontal gyrus, left superior frontal gyrus, bilateral superior medial frontal gyrus, left inferior temporal gyrus, and left middle occipital region. Positive correlations between SFCD and loneliness were centered over bilateral lingual gyrus.Conclusion: Depressive symptoms are associated with FCD changes over frontal and temporal regions, which may involve the cognitive control, affective regulation, and default mode networks. Loneliness is associated with FCD changes in bilateral lingual gyri that are known to be important in social cognition. Depressive symptoms and loneliness may be associated with different brain regions in non-demented elderly male.

Highlights

  • IntroductionA cross-sectional study with 359 subjects aged 74 years and older revealed the overall prevalence of depression was 25.1% and an additional 5.6% of the subjects exhibited subthreshold depressive symptoms (Forlani et al, 2014)

  • Depression and loneliness are both prevalent phenomena among elderly populations

  • This study aims to search for brain areas with functional connectivity density (FCD; Tomasi and Volkow, 2010) changes associated with either depressive symptoms or loneliness in a group of non-demented male elders by conducting a resting state fMRI analysis

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Summary

Introduction

A cross-sectional study with 359 subjects aged 74 years and older revealed the overall prevalence of depression was 25.1% and an additional 5.6% of the subjects exhibited subthreshold depressive symptoms (Forlani et al, 2014). The prevalence rate of loneliness was even higher among institutionalized older adults; in a study focusing on nursing home residents without cognitive impairment, more than half of them reported feeling lonely (Drageset et al, 2011). Positive correlations between depressive symptoms and SFCD were observed in left middle frontal gyrus, left superior frontal gyrus, bilateral superior medial frontal gyrus, left inferior temporal gyrus, and left middle occipital region. Conclusion: Depressive symptoms are associated with FCD changes over frontal and temporal regions, which may involve the cognitive control, affective regulation, and default mode networks. Depressive symptoms and loneliness may be associated with different brain regions in non-demented elderly male

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