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The relevance of multiple sclerosis cortical lesions on cortical thinning and their clinical impact as assessed by 7.0-T MRI

Authors :
Constantina A, Treaba
Elena, Herranz
Valeria T, Barletta
Ambica, Mehndiratta
Russell, Ouellette
Jacob A, Sloane
Eric C, Klawiter
Revere P, Kinkel
Caterina, Mainero
Source :
Journal of neurology. 268(7)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

This study aimed to investigate at 7.0-T MRI a) the role of multiple sclerosis (MS) cortical lesions in cortical tissue loss b) their relation to neurological disability.In 76 relapsing remitting and 26 secondary progressive MS patients (N = 102) and 56 healthy subjects 7.0-T TCortical lesions were detected in 96% of patients. White matter lesion load was greater in the high than in the low cortical lesion load MS group (p = 0.01). Both MS groups disclosed clusters (prevalently parietal) of cortical thinning relative to healthy subjects, though these regions did not show the highest cortical lesion density, which predominantly involved frontal regions. Cortical thickness decreased on average by 0.37 mm, (p = 0.002) in MS patients for each unit standard deviation change in white matter lesion volume. The odds of having a higher EDSS were associated with cortical lesion volume (1.78, p = 0.01) and disease duration (1.15, p 0.001).Cortical thinning in MS is not directly related to cortical lesion load but rather with white matter lesion volume. Neurological disability in MS is better explained by cortical lesion volume assessment.

Details

ISSN :
14321459
Volume :
268
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........6a9936c59ab9d65425b8dd515c6bc919