Publication: The Relationships among MRI-Defined Spinal Cord Involvement, Brain Involvement, and Disability in Multiple Sclerosis
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Date
2012-04
Published Version
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Wiley
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Citation
Cohen, Adam B., Mohit Neema, Ashish Arora, Elisa Dell’Oglio, Ralph H. B. Benedict, Shahamat Tauhid, Daniel Goldberg-Zimring et al. "The Relationships among MRI-Defined Spinal Cord Involvement, Brain Involvement, and Disability in Multiple Sclerosis." Journal of Neuroimaging 22, no. 2 (2012): 122-128. DOI: 10.1111/j.1552-6569.2011.00589.x
Research Data
Abstract
Objective
To determine the inter-relationships between MRI-defined lesion and atrophy measures of spinal cord involvement and brain involvement and their relationships to disability in a small cohort of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS).
Background
Although it is known that cervical spinal cord atrophy correlates with disability in MS, it is unknown whether it is the most important determinant when compared to other regions of the CNS. Furthermore, it is not clear to what extent brain and cord lesions and atrophy are related.
Design/methods
3T MRI of the whole brain and whole spinal cord was obtained in 21 patients with MS, including 18 with relapsing-remitting, one with secondary progressive, one with primary progressive, and one with a clinically isolated syndrome. Brain global gray and white matter volumes were segmented with SPM8. Spinal cord contour volume was segmented in whole by a semi-automated method with bins assigned to either the cervical or thoracic regions. All CNS volumes were normalized by the intracranial volume. Brain and cord T2 hyperintense lesions were segmented using a semi-automated edge finding tool.
Results
Among all MRI measures, only upper cervical spinal cord volume significantly correlated with Expanded Disability Status Scale score (r=−0.515, p=0.020). The brain-cord relationships between whole or regional spinal cord volume or lesions and gray matter, white matter, or whole brain volume or whole brain lesions were generally weak and all non-significant.
Conclusions/relevance
In this preliminary study of mildly disabled, treated MS patients, cervical spinal cord atrophy most strongly correlates with physical disability in MS when accounting for a wide range of other CNS measures of lesions and atrophy, including thoracic or whole spinal cord volume, and cerebral gray, white or whole brain volume. The weak relationship between spinal cord and brain lesions and atrophy may suggest that they progress rather independently in patients with MS.
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Keywords
Research Subject Categories::MEDICINE::Physiology and pharmacology::Radiological research::Radiology, Research Subject Categories::MEDICINE::Physiology and pharmacology::Physiology::Clinical neurophysiology
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