4.6 Review

Frontotemporal Pathology in Motor Neuron Disease Phenotypes: Insights From Neuroimaging

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.723450

Keywords

ALS; MND; PLS; MRI; PET; SMA; PMA; SBMA

Funding

  1. Spastic Paraplegia Foundation (SPF)
  2. Health Research Board [HRB EIA-2017-019]
  3. EU Joint ProgrammeNeurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND)
  4. Irish Institute of Clinical Neuroscience (IICN)
  5. Iris O'Brien Foundation
  6. French charity for ALS research (ARSLA)
  7. Thierry Latran Foundation
  8. EU Joint Programme-Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND)

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Frontotemporal involvement varies among different motor neuron disease phenotypes, with some cases readily detecting frontotemporal degeneration while others show limited cerebral pathology. Neuroimaging plays an important role in studying extra-motor disease burden, but faces challenges such as sample size limitations and longitudinal study biases.
Frontotemporal involvement has been extensively investigated in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) but remains relatively poorly characterized in other motor neuron disease (MND) phenotypes such as primary lateral sclerosis (PLS), progressive muscular atrophy (PMA), spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), spinal bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), post poliomyelitis syndrome (PPS), and hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP). This review focuses on insights from structural, metabolic, and functional neuroimaging studies that have advanced our understanding of extra-motor disease burden in these phenotypes. The imaging literature is limited in the majority of these conditions and frontotemporal involvement has been primarily evaluated by neuropsychology and post mortem studies. Existing imaging studies reveal that frontotemporal degeneration can be readily detected in ALS and PLS, varying degree of frontotemporal pathology may be captured in PMA, SBMA, and HSP, SMA exhibits cerebral involvement without regional predilection, and there is limited evidence for cerebral changes in PPS. Our review confirms the heterogeneity extra-motor pathology across the spectrum of MNDs and highlights the role of neuroimaging in characterizing anatomical patterns of disease burden in vivo. Despite the contribution of neuroimaging to MND research, sample size limitations, inclusion bias, attrition rates in longitudinal studies, and methodological constraints need to be carefully considered. Frontotemporal involvement is a quintessential clinical facet of MND which has important implications for screening practices, individualized management strategies, participation in clinical trials, caregiver burden, and resource allocation. The academic relevance of imaging frontotemporal pathology in MND spans from the identification of genetic variants, through the ascertainment of presymptomatic changes to the design of future epidemiology studies.

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