Abstract
The glymphatic system, an expansive cerebral waste-disposal network, harbors myriad enigmatic facets necessitating elucidation of their nexus with diverse pathologies. Murine investigations have revealed a relationship between the glymphatic system and affective disorders. This study aimed to illuminate the interplay between bipolar disorder and the glymphatic system. Fifty-eight individuals afflicted with bipolar disorder were identified through meticulous psychiatric assessment. These individuals were juxtaposed with a cohort of 66 comparably aged and sex-matched, mentally stable subjects. Subsequent analysis entailed the application of covariance analysis to evaluate along with the perivascular space (ALPS) index, a novel magnetic resonance imaging method for assessing brain interstitial fluid dynamics via diffusion tensor imaging within the bipolar and control cohorts. We also evaluated the correlation between the ALPS index and clinical parameters, which included the Hamilton Depression scale scores, disease duration, and other clinical assessments. Moreover, partial correlation analyses, incorporating age and sex as covariates, were performed to investigate the relationships between the ALPS index and clinical measures within the two cohorts. A noteworthy adverse correlation was observed between the ALPS index and illness duration. A free-water imaging analysis revealed a substantial elevation in the free-water index within the white-matter tracts, prominently centered on the corpus callosum, within the bipolar cohort relative to that in the control group. In analogous cerebral regions, a conspicuous affirmative correlation was observed between the free-water–corrected radial diffusivity and depression rating scales. Our results showed that the protracted course of bipolar disorder concomitantly exacerbated glymphatic system dysregulation.
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