Abstract

Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) may be associated with an increased risk of depressive symptoms. Serum uric acid (SUA), an antioxidant, may be involved in the occurrence and development of depressive symptoms, but the mechanism remains unknown. Moreover, the relationship between structural brain networks and SUA has not been explored. This study examined the relationship between SUA and depressive symptoms in patients with SVD using graph theory analysis. We recruited 208 SVD inpatients and collected fasting blood samples upon admission. Depressive symptoms were assessed using the 24-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD-24). Magnetic resonance imaging was used to evaluate SVD, and diffusion tensor images were used to analyze structural brain networks using graph theory. Patients with depressive symptoms (n = 34, 25.76%) compared to those without (334.53 vs 381.28 μmol/L, p = 0.017) had lower SUA levels. Graph theoretical analyses showed a positive association of SUA with betweenness centrality, nodal efficiency, and clustering coefficients and a negative correlation with the shortest path length in SVD with depressive symptoms group. HAMD scores were significantly associated with nodal network metrics in the right cerebral hemisphere. Our findings suggested that lower SUA levels are significantly associated with disrupted structural brain networks in the right cerebral hemisphere of patients with SVD who have depressive symptoms.

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