| Literature DB >> 30390274 |
Sirio Cocozza1, Camilla Russo2, Giuseppe Pontillo2, Antonio Pisani3, Arturo Brunetti2.
Abstract
Fabry disease (FD) is a rare X-linked disorder characterised by abnormal progressive lysosomal deposition of globotriaosylceramide in a large variety of cell types. The central nervous system (CNS) is often involved in FD, with a wide spectrum of manifestations ranging from mild symptoms to more severe courses related to acute cerebrovascular events. In this review we present the current knowledge on brain imaging for this condition, with a comprehensive and critical description of its most common neuroradiological imaging findings. Moreover, we report results from studies that investigated brain physiopathology underlying this disorder by using advanced imaging techniques, suggesting possible future directions to further explore CNS involvement in FD patients. TEACHING POINTS: • Conventional neuroradiological findings in FD are aspecific. • White matter hyperintensities represent the more consistent brain imaging feature of FD • Abnormalities of the vasculature wall of posterior circulation are also consistent features. • The pulvinar sign is not reliable as a finding pathognomonic for FD. • Advanced imaging techniques have increased our knowledge about brain involvement in FD.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system; Fabry disease; Magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2018 PMID: 30390274 PMCID: PMC6269338 DOI: 10.1007/s13244-018-0664-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insights Imaging ISSN: 1869-4101
The major conventional imaging findings in Fabry disease
| Conventional imaging findings | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stroke | Increased prevalence of cerebrovascular events in FD, with predilection for females and young subjects [ | Frequently occurring before the diagnosis, in absence of other signs and symptoms of the underlying disorder [ | Neurological and neuroradiological findings classical and consistent with affected vascular territory [ | Haemorrhagic stroke is rare, whereas cerebral micro-bleeding more commonly observed (11–30% of cases) [ |
| White matter hyperintensities | Observed in up to 80% of patients [ | Non-specific distribution, with a variable periventricular, deep and/or subcortical white matter involvement [ | High lesion load can mimic other conditions, including multiple sclerosis. Relative sparing of midline and infratentorial structures can help in the differential diagnosis [ | Long-term enzyme replacement therapy can apparently stabilise white matter lesion load [ |
| Vertebro-basilar diameter | Dilative arteriopathy of the vertebro-basilar system is a common, although inconstant, neuroradiological feature of FD [ | Vessel alterations include elongation, tortuosity, ectasia and focal aneurismal dilatation of vertebral and basilar arteries [ | Basilar artery elongation and dilatation seems to be an age-dependent phenomenon, more pronounced in FD patients [ | The increase in arterial diameters apparently show stability over time [ |
| Pulvinar sign | Unilateral or bilateral hyperintensity of the thalamic pulvinar on unenhanced T1-weighted brain MRI [ | Originally it was thought to be a common and pathognomonic sign of FD [ | Is a sign present in a low proportion of patients (3% of cases), mostly observed in male patients with severe renal involvement [ | Pulvinar sign should no longer be recognised as a neuroradiological finding characteristic of FD, due to its low incidence and specificity |
Fig. 1Brain MRI findings in Fabry disease patients suffering from major cerebrovascular events. In the upper row, images obtained from a 61-year-old woman showing the presence of a large chronic ischaemic lesion at the level of the right frontal lobe, coupled to a significant enlargement of lateral ventricles, while in the lower row small ischaemic lesions at the level of the inferior portion of the right cerebellar lobe are present in 52-year-old man
Fig. 2White matter involvement in Fabry disease could range from small, scattered and punctuate T2-weighted hyperintense foci (upper row, 46-year-old woman, or middle row, 52-year-old man) to bilateral diffuse, patchy and partly confluent white matter hyperintensities (lower row, 40-year-old woman). Although being the most common neuroimaging finding in Fabry disease, white matter hyperintensities appearance and distribution are not specific in this condition
Fig. 3Maximum intensity projection of an intracranial three-dimensional time-of-flight MR angiography sequence acquired in a 52-year-old man with Fabry disease. Coronal (a) and axial (b) reconstructions show the presence of a mild elongation and tortuosity of the posterior circulation
The major advanced imaging findings in Fabry disease
| Advanced imaging findings | ||||
| Brain tissue volume | In absence of a severe cerebrovascular pathology, global normalised grey and white matter volumes are preserved in FD patients | A global reduction of the intracranial volume has been observed, suggesting the presence of an abnormal neural development [ | Voxel-based morphometry studies showed clusters of reduced grey matter density in bilateral thalami and hippocampi [ | Hippocampal atrophy increases over years, and does not correlate with lesion load [ |
| Diffusion tensor imaging | A diffuse and significant microstructural white matter involvement is present in FD [ | Elevated total brain parenchymal average diffusion constant has been observed, independent from white matter lesions [ | Increased mean diffusivity and reduced fractional anisotropy in frontal, parietal and temporal normal-appearing white matter [ | Voxel-based DTI showed the presence of microstructural damage affecting also the thalamus [ |
| Functional MRI | Significant subtle functional changes seem to occur in FD, independently from major cerebrovascular events [ | During motor task, FD patients showed increased activation of additional cortical regions [ | Altered corticostriatal functional connectivity was observed, suggesting a subclinical involvement of motor circuits [ | Functional changes involve not only the motor, but also cognitive functions, with alterations of the so-called default mode network [ |
| Other MRI techniques | MRI spectroscopy | Magnetisation transfer | Quantitative MRI | MRI Arterial spin labelling |
| Inconstant reduction in NAA/Cr ratio in different brain areas, affecting both cortical and subcortical structures [ | Reduced magnetisation transfer ratio and bound-pool fraction in the normal-appearing white matter, suggesting a decrease of myelin density [ | Increased susceptibility values in the striato-nigral pathway of FD patients [ | Increased cerebral flow in the white matter, with particular reference to the splenium of the corpus callosum [ | |
| Nuclear medicine | Increased relative cerebral blood flow of the posterior and periventricular regions [ | The altered relative cerebral blood flow seems to reverse after prolonged enzyme replacement therapy [ | No significant global glucose metabolism changes affects the brain of FD patients [ | Hypometabolic areas only observed in regions with infarcts or haemorrhages on MRI scans [ |
Fig. 4Selected coronal (upper row) and axial (lower row) slices showing in red-yellow the presence of widespread regions of reduced fractional anisotropy in Fabry disease patients compared to healthy controls (results of a tract-based spatial statistics analysis reported in [63])
Fig. 5Three-dimensional rendering of a healthy brain in the Montreal Neurological Institute space showing, in red, regions of reduced functional connectivity with the motor cortex in Fabry disease patients compared to healthy controls (adapted from [68])