Literature DB >> 26963576

Brain MR Imaging in Patients with Lower Motor Neuron-Predominant Disease.

Edoardo G Spinelli1, Federica Agosta1, Pilar M Ferraro1, Nilo Riva1, Christian Lunetta1, Yuri M Falzone1, Giancarlo Comi1, Andrea Falini1, Massimo Filippi1.   

Abstract

Purpose To investigate the patterns of cortical thinning and white matter tract damage in patients with lower motor neuron (LMN)-predominant disease compared with healthy control subjects and those with classic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and to evaluate the relationship between brain structural changes and clinical and cognitive features in these patients. Materials and Methods This study was approved by the local ethical committee, and written informed consent was obtained from all subjects before enrollment. Twenty-eight patients with LMN-predominant disease were compared with 55 patients with ALS and 56 healthy control subjects. Patients underwent a clinical and neuropsychological assessment and T1-weighted and diffusion-tensor magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Surface-based morphometry was used to assess cortical thickness. Tract-based spatial statistics and tractography were used to study white matter tract damage. Results Patients with LMN-predominant disease did not show differences compared with healthy control subjects in cortical thickness and diffusion-tensor MR imaging metrics. Patients with ALS showed cortical thinning of the motor-related cortices and a distributed involvement of the prefrontal, temporal, and parietal gyri (P < .05, false discovery rate corrected). Patients with ALS also showed white matter damage along motor and extramotor tracts compared with control subjects and patients with LMN-predominant disease (tract-based spatial statistics: P < .05, family-wise error corrected; tractography: P values < .001 to .05, false discovery rate corrected). In patients with LMN-predominant disease, cognitive deficits correlated with alterations in diffusivity in the left cingulum (r = -0.66, P = .01) and superior longitudinal fasciculus (r = -0.65, P = .05). Conclusion Motor and extramotor cortical thinning and diffusion-tensor MR imaging alterations were specific for motor neuron disease phenotypes, with clinically overt upper motor neuron involvement. However, the lack of significant differences in cortical thickness between subjects with LMN-predominant disease and those with ALS and cognitive deficits associated with alterations in diffusivity in patients with LMN-predominant disease suggest that investigating brain structural and microstructural MR imaging features may provide markers of central nervous system damage in patients with rare motor neuron disease. (©) RSNA, 2016 Online supplemental material is available for this article.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26963576     DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2016151846

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiology        ISSN: 0033-8419            Impact factor:   11.105


  16 in total

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2.  Brain MRI shows white matter sparing in Kennedy's disease and slow-progressing lower motor neuron disease.

Authors:  Edoardo G Spinelli; Federica Agosta; Pilar M Ferraro; Giorgia Querin; Nilo Riva; Cinzia Bertolin; Ilaria Martinelli; Christian Lunetta; Andrea Fontana; Gianni Sorarù; Massimo Filippi
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8.  Multimodal structural MRI in the diagnosis of motor neuron diseases.

Authors:  Pilar M Ferraro; Federica Agosta; Nilo Riva; Massimiliano Copetti; Edoardo Gioele Spinelli; Yuri Falzone; Gianni Sorarù; Giancarlo Comi; Adriano Chiò; Massimo Filippi
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2017-08-02       Impact factor: 4.881

9.  Clusters of anatomical disease-burden patterns in ALS: a data-driven approach confirms radiological subtypes.

Authors:  Peter Bede; Aizuri Murad; Jasmin Lope; Orla Hardiman; Kai Ming Chang
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10.  Fast progressive lower motor neuron disease is an ALS variant: A two-centre tract of interest-based MRI data analysis.

Authors:  Hans-Peter Müller; Federica Agosta; Nilo Riva; Edoardo G Spinelli; Giancarlo Comi; Albert C Ludolph; Massimo Filippi; Jan Kassubek
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