| Literature DB >> 28817574 |
Nicole C Keong1,2, Alonso Pena3, Stephen J Price2, Marek Czosnyka2, Zofia Czosnyka2, Elise E DeVito4,5, Charlotte R Housden4, Barbara J Sahakian4, John D Pickard2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The pathogenesis of normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) remains unclear which limits both early diagnosis and prognostication. The responsiveness to intervention of differing, complex and concurrent injury patterns on imaging have not been well-characterized. We used diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to explore the topography and reversibility of white matter injury in NPH pre- and early after shunting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28817574 PMCID: PMC5560677 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinical characteristics of patients.
| Pt | Age | Sex | BCI | Radiological abnormalities | NPH symptoms | Investigations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 69 | M | 0.26 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, atrophy, DWMH | Gait, memory, urinary incontinence | Rcsf = 20.80 mmHg/ml/min |
| 2 | 78 | F | 0.26 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, no atrophy or DWMH | Predominant memory disturbance | Rcsf = 16.37 mmHg/ml/min |
| 3 | 70 | F | 0.40 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, DWMH | Gait and balance disturbance, memory impairment, urinary incontinence | Rcsf = 12.40 mmHg/ml/min |
| 4 | 76 | M | 0.26 | Hydrocephalus and PVL | Gait and balance disturbance, memory impairment, urinary incontinence | Lumbar drainage positive |
| 5 | 78 | M | 0.28 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, DWMH | Gait and balance disturbance, mild memory impairment | Lumbar drainage positive, Rcsf via Ommaya reservoir = 10.51mmHg/ml/min |
| 6 | 72 | M | 0.34 | Hydrocephalus and PVL | Gait and balance problems, memory impairment | Rcsf = 13.91 mmHg/ml/min |
| 7 | 60 | M | 0.30 | Hydrocephalus and PVL | Predominant gait and balance problems, mild memory impairment, urinary frequency | Rcsf = 12.94 mmHg/ml/min |
| 8 | 78 | M | 0.26 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, atrophy, enlarged peri-Sylvian spaces, DWMH | Predominant gait and balance problems, mild memory impairment | Lumbar drainage positive |
| 9 | 70 | F | 0.29 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, No atrophy or DWMH | Predominant gait and balance disturbance, mild memory impairment | Rcsf = 20.02 mmHg/ml/min |
| 10 | 78 | M | 0.27 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, atrophy and DWMH | Gait and balance problems, memory impairment, urinary incontinence | Rcsf = 13.80 mmHg/ml/min |
| 11 | 82 | M | 0.28 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, DWMH | Gait and balance problems, memory disturbance and urinary incontinence | Rcsf = 14.41 mmHg/ml/min |
| 12 | 71 | M | 0.32 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, no atrophy or DWMH | Gait and balance disturbance, urinary frequency, memory impairment | Lumbar drainage positive |
| 13 | 84 | F | 0.26 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, atrophy, enlarged peri-Sylvian spaces, DWMH | Predominant gait and balance disturbance, mild memory impairment, nocturia | Rcsf = 13.95 mmHg/ml/min |
| 14 | 74 | F | 0.32 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, DWMH | Gait and balance disturbance, memory impairment, urinary incontinence | Rcsf = 10.92 mmHg/ml/min |
| 15 | 76 | M | 0.26 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, DWMH and enlarged peri-Sylvian spaces | Gait and balance disturbance, memory impairment, urinary incontinence | Rcsf = 24.41 mmHg/ml/min |
| 16 | 79 | F | 0.31 | Hydrocephalus and PVL, DWMH, enlarged peri- Sylvian spaces | Predominant gait and balance disturbance, memory impairment | Rcsf = 11.00 mmHg/ml/min |
BCI = bicaudate index, DWMH = deep white matter hyperintensities, Pt = patient, PVL = periventricular lucency, Rcsf = resistance to cerebrospinal fluid outflow
Refinement of white matter tracts into an ‘at-risk’ model of injury in NPH.
| ROI | Grouping | Relevance | Discussion |
|---|---|---|---|
| SLF | Cognitive | Excluded | Whilst spatial disorientation, for example, topographical deficits, is a feature of the NPH spectrum, language disorders are not typical. This tract, with its long anterior-posterior arrangement was initially explored but found to be too prone to valve artefact. |
| Spatial/ language | |||
| ILF | Cognitive | Included | Cognitive dysfunction, such as inability to match visual recognition of common objects with the functional sequences required to use them, is a feature of the NPH spectrum. This tract was included for its relevance; its long anterior-posterior arrangement adjacent to the ventricles. Its inferior position in relation to the SLF protected this tract from issues related to valve artefact. |
| Visual recognition | P = lateral | ||
| IFO | Cognitive | Included | Whilst language disorders are not typical of the NPH spectrum, the long anterior-posterior arrangement of this tract and its fronto-basal position provided relevance to the frontal executive dysfunction seen in NPH. This tract was included but only specifically at the fronto-temporal point, i.e. the area of most likely distortion due to expansion of the frontal horns (combined with the UNC). |
| Language | P = relatively remote | ||
| UNC | Cognitive | Included | The fronto-temporal arrangement of this tract and its participation in the limbic pathway provided relevance to the frontal executive dysfunction seen in NPH. This tract was included at the area of most likely distortion due to expansion of the frontal horns, i.e. at its point of curvature. Due to considerations of crossing fibres and the relatively reduced white matter fibre bundle sizes seen in NPH, this ROI was combined with the adjacent IFO tract at this point for purposes of enhanced consistency. |
| Ventral limbic | P = relatively remote | ||
| CING | Cognitive | Excluded | The relationship of this tract to the ventricles and its participation in the limbic pathway provided relevance to the frontal executive dysfunction seen in NPH. However, the relatively large amount of surrounding CSF represented in the ROI for the cingulum bundle rendered the interpretation of this tract difficult using this methodology, and resulted in its exclusion. |
| Dorsal limbic | |||
| GCC | Motor | Included | The close relationship with this tract to the ventricles and its participation in the motor pathway provided a clear relevance to the gait and balance apraxia seen in NPH. This part of the corpus callosum was included for its anterior/ frontal location. |
| Contralateral executive | P = adjacent | ||
| BCC | Motor | Included | The close relationship with this tract to the ventricles and its participation in the motor pathway provided a clear relevance to the gait and balance apraxia seen in NPH. This part of the corpus callosum was included for its midpoint location between the two ventricles and its role in a potential hydrocephalic disconnection syndrome. |
| Contralateral executive | P = adjacent | ||
| SCC | Motor | Excluded | The close relationship with this tract to the ventricles and its participation in the motor pathway provided a clear relevance to the gait and balance apraxia seen in NPH. However, the GCC and BCC were deemed to be the stronger and more relevant ROIs. |
| Contralateral executive | |||
| ALIC | Cognitive | Excluded | Behavioural syndromes are possible in, but not typical of, NPH. The PLIC tract was also deemed to be far superior as a ROI in both functional and neuroanatomical considerations. |
| Behaviour | |||
| ATR | Cognitive | Included | This thalamocortical fibre pathway is found in the medial portion of the ALIC. However, its prefrontal cortical projections provide more relevance than ALIC to the likely areas of distortion due to the expansion of the frontal horns. This tract has been implicated both in poor cognitive performance in vascular dementia and psychopathology, such as schizophrenia, and was therefore included. |
| Behaviour | P = lateral | ||
| GIC | Sensory | Excluded | Sensory syndromes are not typical of NPH. The PLIC tract was deemed far superior as a ROI. |
| PLIC | Motor | Included | The key role of the corticospinal tract in gait and balance dysfunction provided a clear relevance to NPH. In addition, the superior-inferior arrangement of this tract, relatively remote to the ventricles, provided a good comparator to other relevant tracts that were adjacent and lateral to the ventricles. |
| P = relatively remote |
SLF = superior longitudinal fasciculus, ILF, inferior longitudinal fasciculus, IFO = inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus, UNC = uncinate fasciculus, CING = cingulum, GCC = genu of the corpus callosum, BCC = body of the corpus callosum, SCC = splenium of the corpus callosum, ALIC = anterior limb of the internal capsule, GIC = genu of the internal capsule, PLIC = posterior limb of the internal capsule, P = position in relation to lateral ventricles
Fig 1Illustration of white matter regions of interest (ROIs).
White matter tracts represented in the context of normal ventricular size for clarity.
Pre-operative vs. early post-operative NPH patients and Healthy controls (HC)–mean (SD), t-tests: FA and MD measures.
| DTI measure | Status | GCC | BCC | ILF | ATR | IFO/UNC | PLIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.602 (0.128) | 0.478 (0.097) | 0.545 (0.051) | 0.380 (0.060) | 0.403 (0.059) | 0.751 (0.034) | ||
| 0.571 (0.143) | 0.470 (0.071) | 0.519 (0.069) | 0.383 (0.045) | 0.421 (0.068) | 0.682 (0.066) | ||
| 0.768 (0.023) | 0.612 (0.090) | 0.575 (0.070) | 0.452 (0.046) | 0.399 (0.048) | 0.713 (0.064) | ||
| -21.6 | -21.9 | -5.2 | -15.9 | +1.0 | +5.3 | ||
| (x10-4mm2/s) | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| -5.1 | -1.7 | -4.8 | +0.8 | +4.5 | -9.2 | ||
| ( | |||||||
| -25.7 | -23.2 | -9.7 | -15.3 | +5.5 | -4.3 | ||
| 8.295 (1.569) | 9.348 (1.454) | 7.807 (0.692) | 7.045 (0.360) | 7.140 (0.421) | 5.879 (0.440) | ||
| 8.226 (1.847) | 10.347 (1.353) | 7.662 (0.586) | 7.220 (0.939) | 7.000 (0.393) | 5.899 (0.423) | ||
| 6.196 (0.341) | 7.416 (1.078) | 6.610 (1.143) | 6.633 (0.558) | 6.550 (0.380) | 5.350 (0.299) | ||
| +33.9 | +26.1 | +18.1 | +6.2 | +9.0 | +9.9 | ||
| (x10-4mm2/s) | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ||
| -0.8 | +10.7 | -1.9 | +2.5 | -2.0 | +0.3 | ||
| +32.8 | +39.5 | +15.9 | +8.8 | +6.9 | +10.3 | ||
Shading in grey illustrates differences in white matter injury patterns were significant.
Pre-operative vs. early post-operative NPH patients and Healthy controls (HC)–mean (SD), t-tests: Axial, radial diffusivities.
| DTI measure | Status | GCC | BCC | ILF | ATR | IFO/UNC | PLIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14.570 (1.058) | 14.430 (1.503) | 13.040 (1.377) | 10.042 (0.566) | 10.430 (0.789) | 12.377 (1.011) | ||
| 14.110 (2.134) | 15.548 (1.421) | 12.512 (1.140) | 10.290 (1.209) | 10.375 (0.767) | 11.550 (0.870) | ||
| 11.949 (3.875) | 13.072 (1.191) | 11.302 (1.688) | 10.214 (0.909) | 9.499 (0.569) | 9.677 (3.398) | ||
| +21.9 | +10.4 | +15.4 | -1.7 | +9.8 | +27.9 | ||
| (x10-4mm2/s) | ( | ( | ( | ||||
| -3.2 | +7.7 | -4.0 | +2.5 | -0.5 | -6.7 | ||
| +18.1 | +18.9 | +10.7 | +0.7 | +9.2 | +19.4 | ||
| 5.158 (2.047) | 6.807 (1.671) | 5.191 (0.547) | 5.547 (0.500) | 5.358 (0.738) | 3.255 (2.013) | ||
| 5.530 (2.113) | 8.363 (3.143) | 5.643 (1.893) | 6.071 (1.758) | 5.744 (2.033) | 4.395 (2.923) | ||
| 2.677 (0.239) | 4.589 (1.291) | 4.264 (0.949) | 4.843 (0.497) | 5.075 (0.425) | 2.621 (0.386) | ||
| +92.7 | +48.3 | +21.7 | +14.5 | +5.6 | +24.2 | ||
| (x10-4mm2/s) | ( | ( | ( | ( | |||
| +7.2 | +22.9 | +8.7 | +9.4 | +7.2 | +35.0 | ||
| +106.6 | +82.2 | +32.3 | +25.4 | +13.2 | +67.7 | ||
Shading in grey indicates that differences in white matter injury patterns were significant.
Fig 2DTI profiles in pre-operative and post-operative NPH patients vs. healthy controls (in percentage difference (%)).
Illustration of DTI profiles—Four measures comprising the full panel for DTI interpretation, (FA, MD, L1 and L2and3), are visually represented as radar graphs. Differences in measures may be viewed concurrently; each axis is scalar and dimensionally comparable. The morphology of the graph, i.e. the shape of the radar web, is dependent upon i) the degree of differences between the two groups compared (the larger the differences, the bigger the area of the radar web) and ii) the DTI measure predominantly affected (the radar web points towards the DTI measure with the highest percentage difference between the groups).
Fig 3PQ plots of pre-operative and post-operative NPH patients compared to healthy controls.
The effect of shunting in NPH patients. Trajectories of six brain ROIs in the p:q plane, illustrating their evolution from control (HEALTHY), to hydrocephalus pre-shunting (PRE) and two weeks after shunting (POST). A round trip would represent that the ROIs have completed a return journey to normal diffusion levels.
Pathophysiological basis for DTI interpretation in NPH (see Discussion for references; eq denotes equivocal findings in literature).
| Pathological conditions | FA | MD | L1 | L2and3 | Interpretation | Pathophysiology and relevance to NPH |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A broad range of neurological conditions | Low | eq | eq | eq | Reductions in FA are more common; increases in FA are more rarely observed | FA is dependent on the magnitude of changes in axial and radial diffusivities |
| Aging, leukoaraiosis | eq | High | eq | eq | Small increase in periventricular MD in normal ageing | Age-matched healthy controls are important for the study of NPH |
| Demyelination | eq | eq | eq | High | Myelin increases the orderliness of white matter fibre tracts | Increased orderliness of tracts is characterized by increased axial, reduced radial diffusivities |
| Remyelination | eq | eq | High | Low | ||
| Axonal loss | Low | High | Low | High | Changes in FA, MD and axial are features of axonal loss | These changes are likely to be irreversible, demyelination increases radial diffusivity |
| Vasogenic oedema | Low | High | eq | eq | Pure changes in vasogenic oedema do not result in significant differences in diffusivities | Oedema produces changes sufficient to impact upon FA and MD |
| Carpal tunnel syndrome, cervical spondylotic myelopathy | Low | High | Low | High | Pure compression in fixed compartments produces a situation without the possibility of stretch | Compression without stretch conversely increases tract tortuosity due to impaction |
| Displacement around tumours | High | eq | High | Low | Distortion due to space-occupying lesions | Stretch without compression, no impact on MD |
| Obstructive, paediatric hydrocephalus | eq | High | High | eq | Restricted to periventricular tissues, tend to resolve after CSF diversion | Probably the result of reversal of CSF flow through the ependymal lining |
| NPH in published work | High | High | High | eq | MD histogram analysis able to distinguish NPH from neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases with 86% sensitivity and 96% specificity | MD alone is inadequate to characterize complex post-operative changes; reduction has been demonstrated with external lumbar drainage, yet MD remained significantly different in patients vs. controls two weeks following shunting. |
| NPH in this study (including propoportions of change)– | Very Low | Very High | High | Dominant | Loss of integrity with significant compression and oedema sufficient to cause axonal disruption (GCC and BCC; adjacent to ventricles) | Different patterns coexisting, dependent on proximity to the ventricles and orientation of white matter fibres within the tracts. Multifactorial probably including axonal degeneration, demyelination, small vessel disease, enlarged Virchow-Robin spaces, reversal of interstitial fluid flow, increased transependymal CSF diffusion and impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation within the white matter. The component of stretch/ compression, characterized by increased axial diffusivity and anisotropy, appears to be the most amenable to surgical intervention. |
| 2. Stretch/oedema | Low | High | High | High | Loss of integrity with significant compression and oedema (ILF; lateral to ventricles) | |
| 3. Predominant stretch/compression | High | High | Dominant | Moderate | Loss of integrity with predominant compression (PLIC; remote to ventricles) |