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Spinal cord involvement in Kearns-Sayre syndrome: a neuroimaging study

Authors :
Martinelli Diego
Deodato Federica
Pasquini Luca
Napolitano Antonio
Dionisi-Vici Carlo
Guarnera Alessia
Diodato Daria
Rossi-Espagnet Maria Camilla
Carrozzo Rosalba
Longo Daniela
Source :
Neuroradiology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Purpose Spinal cord involvement in Kearns-Sayre (KSS) syndrome could be more frequent than commonly thought. Our aims were to evaluate the involvement of the spinal cord in patients with KSS by means of MRI and to investigate possible correlations of spinal and brain disease with patient disability. Methods Eleven patients with KSS disease and spinal cord MRI were retrospectively recruited. The severity of spinal disease was defined as follows: grade 0 (none), grade 1 (focal), and grade 2 (extensive). We calculated a radiologic score of brain involvement based on typical features. We performed a chi-square test to correlate spinal cord and brain MRI involvement to patient disability. For significant variables, a contingency coefficient, phi factor, and Cramer’s V were also computed. Results Spinal cord lesions were detected in 6/11 patients, showing four patterns: involvement of gray matter, gray matter and posterior columns, posterior columns, and anterior columns. The severity of spinal disease was grade 1 in two and grade 2 in four patients. All patients showed brain involvement (9-point average for patients with spinal involvement and 10 for the others). A significant correlation was found between disability score and spinal cord involvement (χ2 = 7.64; p = 0.022) or brain score (χ2 = 26.85; p = 0.043). Significance for brain score-disability correlation increased with the spinal cord as a cofactor (χ2 = 24.51; p = 0.017, phi factor = 1.201, Cramer’s V = 0.849, contingency effect = 0.767; p = 0.017). Conclusion Spinal cord lesions are common in KSS. Patients with spinal disease show higher disability than patients without spinal cord lesions, supporting the inclusion of dedicated acquisitions to routine MRI of the brain in patients with KSS.

Details

ISSN :
14321920 and 00283940
Volume :
62
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuroradiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....223974188503a4a6106b7982863101d2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00234-020-02501-0