Literature DB >> 11176944

Regional magnetic resonance imaging lesion burden and cognitive function in multiple sclerosis: a longitudinal study.

R A Sperling1, C R Guttmann, M J Hohol, S K Warfield, M Jakab, M Parente, E L Diamond, K R Daffner, M J Olek, E J Orav, R Kikinis, F A Jolesz, H L Weiner.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between magnetic resonance imaging regional lesion burden and cognitive performance in multiple sclerosis (MS) over a 4-year follow-up period.
DESIGN: Twenty-eight patients with MS underwent magnetic resonance imaging and took the Brief, Repeatable Battery of Neuropsychological Tests in Multiple Sclerosis at baseline, 1-year, and 4-year follow-up. An automated 3-dimensional lesion detection method was used to identify MS lesions within anatomical regions on proton density T2-weighted images. The relationship between magnetic resonance imaging regional lesion volumes and the Brief, Repeatable Battery of Neuropsychological Tests in Multiple Sclerosis results was examined using regression analyses.
RESULTS: At all time points, frontal lesion volume represented the greatest proportion of total lesion volume, and the percentage of white matter classified as lesion was also highest in frontal and parietal regions. On neuropsychological testing, when compared with age- and educational level-matched control subjects, patients with MS showed significant impairment on tests of sustained attention, processing speed, and verbal memory (P<.001). Performance on these measures was negatively correlated with MS lesion volume in frontal and parietal regions at baseline, 1-year, and 4-year follow-up (R = -0.55 to -0.73, P<.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Multiple sclerosis lesions show a propensity for frontal and parietal white matter. Lesion burden in these areas was strongly associated with performance on tasks requiring sustained complex attention and working verbal memory. This relationship was consistent over a 4-year period, suggesting that disruption of frontoparietal subcortical networks may underlie the pattern of neuropsychological impairment seen in many patients with MS.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11176944     DOI: 10.1001/archneur.58.1.115

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Neurol        ISSN: 0003-9942


  33 in total

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Review 2.  [Cognitive dysfunctions in multiple sclerosis patients].

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Review 5.  The neuropsychology of multiple sclerosis: contributions of neuroimaging research.

Authors:  H A Wishart; L Flashman; A J Saykin
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 5.285

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7.  Working memory deficits in multiple sclerosis: a controlled study with auditory P600 correlates.

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Authors:  James M Stankiewicz; Bonnie I Glanz; Brian C Healy; Ashish Arora; Mohit Neema; Ralph H B Benedict; Zachary D Guss; Shahamat Tauhid; Guy J Buckle; Maria K Houtchens; Samia J Khoury; Howard L Weiner; Charles R G Guttmann; Rohit Bakshi
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9.  [Normalization of the Brief Repeatable Battery of Neuropsychological tests (BRB-N) for German-speaking regions. Application in relapsing-remitting and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis patients].

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