4.6 Article

Transcallosal and Corticospinal White Matter Disease and Its Association With Motor Impairment in Multiple Sclerosis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.811315

Keywords

multiple sclerosis; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); neurite orientation dispersion and density imagining (NODDI); neurodegeneration; probabilistic tractography

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In this study, the researchers propose that using the NODDI method and high-resolution probabilistic tractography, white matter tract templates can improve the assessment of regional axonal injury and its association with disability in pwMS. The results show that changes in IVF values are related to the disability status and lesion burden in pwMS.
PurposeIn this cross-sectional, proof-of-concept study, we propose that using the more pathologically-specific neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) method, in conjunction with high-resolution probabilistic tractography, white matter tract templates can improve the assessment of regional axonal injury and its association with disability of people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS). MethodsParametric maps of the neurite density index, orientation dispersion index, and the apparent isotropic volume fraction (IVF) were estimated in 18 pwMS and nine matched healthy controls (HCs). Tract-specific values were measured in transcallosal (TC) fibers from the paracentral lobules and TC and corticospinal fibers from the ventral and dorsal premotor areas, presupplementary and supplementary motor areas, and primary motor cortex. The nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test assessed group differences in the NODDI-derived metrics; the Spearman's rank correlation analyses measured associations between the NODDI metrics and other clinical or radiological variables. ResultsIVF values of the TC fiber bundles from the paracentral, presupplementary, and supplementary motor areas were both higher in pwMS than in HCs (p <= 0.045) and in pwMS with motor disability compared to those without motor disability (p <= 0.049). IVF in several TC tracts was associated with the Expanded Disability Status Scale score (p <= 0.047), while regional and overall lesion burden correlated with the Timed 25-Foot Walking Test (p <= 0.049). ConclusionIVF alterations are present in pwMS even when the other NODDI metrics are still mostly preserved. Changes in IVF are biologically non-specific and may not necessarily drive irreversible functional loss. However, by possibly preceding downstream pathologies that are strongly associated with disability accretion, IVF changes are indicators of, otherwise, occult prelesional tissue injury.

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