Lyksborg Mark, Siebner Hartwig R, Sørensen Per S, Blinkenberg Morten, Parker Geoff J M, Dogonowski Anne-Marie, Garde Ellen, Larsen Rasmus, Dyrby Tim B
Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Hvidovre, Denmark; Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, DTU Compute, Technical University of Denmark, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark.
Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Hvidovre, Denmark.
PLoS One. 2014 Apr 18;9(4):e95540. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0095540. eCollection 2014.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) damages central white matter pathways which has considerable impact on disease-related disability. To identify disease-related alterations in anatomical connectivity, 34 patients (19 with relapsing remitting MS (RR-MS), 15 with secondary progressive MS (SP-MS) and 20 healthy subjects underwent diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) of the brain. Based on the dMRI, anatomical connectivity mapping (ACM) yielded a voxel-based metric reflecting the connectivity shared between each individual voxel and all other brain voxels. To avoid biases caused by inter-individual brain-shape differences, they were estimated in a spatially normalized space. Voxel-based statistical analyses using ACM were compared with analyses based on the localized microstructural indices of fractional anisotropy (FA). In both RR-MS and SP-MS patients, considerable portions of the motor-related white matter revealed decreases in ACM and FA when compared with healthy subjects. Patients with SP-MS exhibited reduced ACM values relative to RR-MS in the motor-related tracts, whereas there were no consistent decreases in FA between SP-MS and RR-MS patients. Regional ACM statistics exhibited moderate correlation with clinical disability as reflected by the expanded disability status scale (EDSS). The correlation between these statistics and EDSS was either similar to or stronger than the correlation between FA statistics and the EDSS. Together, the results reveal an improved relationship between ACM, the clinical phenotype, and impairment. This highlights the potential of the ACM connectivity indices to be used as a marker which can identify disease related-alterations due to MS which may not be seen using localized microstructural indices.
多发性硬化症(MS)会损害中枢白质通路,这对与疾病相关的残疾有相当大的影响。为了识别解剖学连接中与疾病相关的改变,34名患者(19名复发缓解型多发性硬化症(RR-MS)患者、15名继发进展型多发性硬化症(SP-MS)患者和20名健康受试者)接受了脑部扩散磁共振成像(dMRI)检查。基于dMRI,解剖学连接图谱(ACM)产生了一种基于体素的指标,反映了每个个体体素与所有其他脑体素之间共享的连接性。为了避免个体脑形状差异引起的偏差,这些指标是在空间归一化空间中估计的。将使用ACM的基于体素的统计分析与基于分数各向异性(FA)的局部微观结构指标的分析进行了比较。与健康受试者相比,RR-MS和SP-MS患者中相当一部分与运动相关的白质在ACM和FA方面均显示降低。在运动相关的神经束中,SP-MS患者相对于RR-MS患者表现出ACM值降低,而SP-MS和RR-MS患者之间FA没有一致的降低。区域ACM统计数据与扩展残疾状态量表(EDSS)所反映的临床残疾呈中度相关。这些统计数据与EDSS之间的相关性与FA统计数据与EDSS之间的相关性相似或更强。总体而言,结果揭示了ACM、临床表型和损伤之间更好的关系。这突出了ACM连接性指标作为一种标志物的潜力,该标志物可以识别由MS引起的与疾病相关的改变,而这些改变可能使用局部微观结构指标无法看到。