Fatigue, monocyte activation, and degree centrality of the thalamus in post-menopausal women living with HIV
Kaitlyn Dillon, Judith Lobo, Suresh Pallikkuth, Bonnie Levin, Roger McIntosh

TL;DR
This study explores how brain connectivity and monocyte activation relate to fatigue in post-menopausal women with and without HIV.
Contribution
The study investigates whether thalamic degree centrality mediates the effect of monocyte activation on fatigue in post-menopausal women with HIV.
Findings
HIV-positive women had higher sCD14 levels and lower thalamic degree centrality compared to HIV-negative women.
Higher sCD14 levels were associated with lower thalamic degree centrality.
Thalamic degree centrality was linked to increased fatigue.
Abstract
Post-menopause is associated with chronic fatigue, inflammation, and aberrant brain connectivity, however there is a dearth of studies comparing these effects as a function of HIV. The current study investigated whether degree centrality of the thalamus mediates the effect of sCD14, a marker of monocyte activation, on fatigue and whether those parameters vary as a function of HIV-status. Resting-state functional connectivity MRI data, blood plasma, and self-report data were collected from 16 HIV + and 25 HIV- post-menopausal women. Analyses tested whether degree centrality of the thalamus, caudate, and right putamen mediated the relationship between sCD14 and fatigue. HIV-serostatus was then tested as a moderator. Compared to HIV-negative, HIV + women had higher levels of sCD14, t(34) = -3.85, p <.001, and lower thalamic degree centrality, t(33) = 2.17, p =.038. SCD14 predicted lower…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStress Responses and Cortisol · Tryptophan and brain disorders · Multiple Sclerosis Research Studies
