| Literature DB >> 17513134 |
Bertrand Audoin1, Maxime Guye, Françoise Reuter, My-Van Au Duong, Sylviane Confort-Gouny, Irina Malikova, Elisabeth Soulier, Patrick Viout, André Ali Chérif, Patrick J Cozzone, Jean Pelletier, Jean-Philippe Ranjeva.
Abstract
Working memory impairment is frequently observed in patients with early multiple sclerosis (MS). MRI and functional MRI studies have shown that working memory impairment is mostly due to diffuse white matter (WM) damage affecting the connectivity between distant cortical areas. However, working memory deficits in early MS patients can be either completely or partly masked by compensatory functional plasticity. It seems likely that concomitantly with the WM bundle injury resulting from pathological processes, the functional plasticity present in early MS patients may be accompanied by reactive structural WM plasticity. This structural plasticity may effectively compensate for connectivity disturbances and/or contribute to functional brain reorganization. The diffusion characteristics of WM bundles involved in working memory were assessed here by performing quantitative diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) tractography on 24 patients with early relapsing-remitting MS and 15 healthy control subjects. The DTI tractography findings showed that WM connections constituting the executive system of working memory were structurally impaired (the fractional anisotropy was lower than normal and the mean diffusivity, higher than normal). A significantly larger number of connections between the left and right thalami was concurrently observed in the MS patients than in the control subjects, which suggests that the WM is endowed with reactive structural plasticity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17513134 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.04.038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556