Abstract

YKL-40 is a novel neuroinflammatory marker associated with white matter damage and cognitive dysfunction. 110 CSVD patients, including 54 with mild cognitive impairment (CSVD-MCI), 56 with no cognitive impairment (CSVD-NCI), and 40 healthy controls (HCs) underwent multimodal magnetic resonance examination, serum YKL-40 level detection and cognitive function assessment to investigate the association between YKL-40 and white matter damage and cognitive impairment in cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) patients. White matter hyperintensities volume was calculated using the Wisconsin White Matter Hyperintensity Segmentation Toolbox (W2MHS) for white matter macrostructural damage evaluation. For white matter microstructural damage evaluation, fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) indices of the region of interest were analyzed based on diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) images using the Tract-Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS) pipeline. The serum YKL-40 level of CSVD was significantly higher than those of HCs, and the CSVD-MCI was higher than in HCs and CSVD-NCI. Furthermore, serum YKL-40 provided high diagnostic accuracy for CSVD and CSVD-MCI. The macroscopic and microstructure of white matter in CSVD-NCI and CSVD-MCI patients indicated different degrees of damage. Disruption of white matter macroscopic and microstructure was significantly associated with YKL-40 levels and cognition deficits. Moreover, the white matter damage mediated the associations between the increased serum YKL-40 levels and cognitive impairment. Our findings demonstrated that YKL-40 might be a potential biomarker of white matter damage in CSVD, whereas white matter damage was associated with cognitive impairment. Serum YKL-40 measurement provides complementary information regarding the neural mechanism of CSVD and its associated cognitive impairment.

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