Alterations in Sensorimotor and Mesiotemporal Cortices and Diffuse White Matter Changes in Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis Detected by Adiabatic Relaxometry

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Authors

FILIP Pavel DUFEK Michal MANGIA Silvia MICHAELI Shalom BAREŠ Martin SCHWARZ Daniel REKTOR Ivan VOJTÍŠEK Lubomír

Year of publication 2021
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Frontiers in Neuroscience
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
web https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnins.2021.711067/full
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2021.711067
Keywords primary progressive multiple sclerosis; T1 mapping; T2 mapping; diffusion weighted imaging; DWI; adiabatic T1 rho mapping; adiabatic T2 rho mapping
Description Background: The research of primary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS) has not been able to capitalize on recent progresses in advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) protocols.

Objective: The presented cross-sectional study evaluated the utility of four different MRI relaxation metrics and diffusion-weighted imaging in PPMS.

Methods: Conventional free precession T1 and T2, and rotating frame adiabatic T1 rho and T2 rho in combination with diffusion-weighted parameters were acquired in 13 PPMS patients and 13 age- and sex-matched controls.

Results: T1 rho, a marker of crucial relevance for PPMS due to its sensitivity to neuronal loss, revealed large-scale changes in mesiotemporal structures, the sensorimotor cortex, and the cingulate, in combination with diffuse alterations in the white matter and cerebellum. T2 rho, particularly sensitive to local tissue background gradients and thus an indicator of iron accumulation, concurred with similar topography of damage, but of lower extent. Moreover, these adiabatic protocols outperformed both conventional T1 and T2 maps and diffusion tensor/kurtosis approaches, methods previously used in the MRI research of PPMS.

Conclusion: This study introduces adiabatic T1 rho and T2 rho as elegant markers confirming large-scale cortical gray matter, cerebellar, and white matter alterations in PPMS invisible to other in vivo biomarkers.

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