http://www.neurology.org/cgi/content/abstract/56/7/926
Neurology 2001;56:926-933
© 2001 American Academy of
Neurology
O. Ciccarelli, MD;, D.J. Werring,
MRCP;, C.A.M. Wheeler–Kingshott, PhD;, G.J. Barker, PhD;, G.J.M. Parker,
PhD;, A.J. Thompson, FRCP; and D.H. Miller, FRCP
From the NMR Research Unit, Institute
of Neurology, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London,
United Kingdom.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to D.H. Miller, NMR Research Unit, Institute of Neurology, the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London WC1N 3BG, UK; e-mail: d.miller@ion.ucl.ac.uk
OBJECTIVE:
To quantitatively investigate water
diffusion changes in normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and gray matter
in patients with MS, and to evaluate whether these changes are correlated
with clinical disability and disease duration.
BACKGROUND:
Diffusion tensor imaging provides
quantitative information about the magnitude and directionality (anisotropy)
of water diffusion in vivo and detects pathologic changes in MS brain tissue.
METHODS:
Diffusion tensor imaging was performed
in 39 patients with MS and in 21 age-matched control subjects. Quantitative
indices, including fractional anisotropy, volume ratio, and mean diffusivity,
were obtained in 30 regions of interest located in normal-appearing basal
ganglia, cerebellar gray matter, and supratentorial and infratentorial
NAWM.
RESULTS:
Patients with MS showed significantly
reduced anisotropy and a trend toward increased diffusivity in the infratentorial
and supratentorial NAWM, and significantly increased anisotropy in the
basal ganglia. In all patients with MS, both fractional anisotropy and
mean diffusivity in the cerebral peduncles were inversely correlated with
the Expanded Disability Status Scale and pyramidal functional scores. In
patients with relapsing-remitting MS, there was a strong correlation between
Expanded Disability Status Scale score and fractional anisotropy in both
supratentorial and infratentorial NAWM. In primary and secondary progressive
MS, disease duration correlated strongly with mean diffusivity in infratentorial
NAWM and fractional anisotropy in the cerebral peduncles, respectively.
CONCLUSION:
The most striking finding of decreased
fractional anisotropy in supratentorial and infratentorial NAWM and increased
fractional anisotropy in basal ganglia may result from axonal degeneration
due to fiber transection in remote focal lesions. Diffusion tensor imaging
indices, in particular fractional anisotropy, appear sensitive to structural
damage in NAWM that is associated with disability and progression in MS.