| Literature DB >> 25589750 |
Antonio Giorgio1, Maria Laura Stromillo1, Alessandro De Leucio1, Francesca Rossi1, Imke Brandes2, Bahia Hakiki3, Emilio Portaccio3, Maria Pia Amato3, Nicola De Stefano4.
Abstract
We hypothesized that appraisal of brain connectivity may shed light on the substrate of the radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS), a term applied to asymptomatic subjects with brain MRI abnormalities highly suggestive of multiple sclerosis. We thus used a multimodal MRI approach on the human brain by modeling measures of microstructural integrity of white matter (WM) tracts with those of functional connectivity (FC) at the level of resting state networks in RIS subjects, demographically matched normal controls (NC), and relapsing-remitting (RR) MS patients, also matched with RIS for brain macrostructural damage (i.e., lesions and atrophy). Compared with NC, in both RIS subjects and MS patients altered integrity of WM tracts was present. However, RIS subjects showed, at a less conservative threshold, lower diffusivities than RRMS patients in distinct cerebral associative, commissural, projection, and cerebellar WM tracts, suggesting a relatively better anatomical connectivity. FC was similar in NC and RIS subjects, even in the presence of important risk factors for MS (spinal cord lesions, oligoclonal bands, and dissemination in time on MRI) and increased in RRMS patients in two clinically relevant networks subserving "processing" (sensorimotor) and "control" (working memory) functions. In RIS, the lack of functional reorganization in key brain networks may represent a model of "functional reserve," which may become upregulated, with an adaptive or maladaptive role, only at a later stage in case of occurrence of clinical deficit.Entities:
Keywords: connectivity; multiple sclerosis; neuroplasticity; radiologically isolated syndrome; resting state networks
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25589750 PMCID: PMC6605365 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2557-14.2015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167