학술논문

Inversion Recovery Ultrashort TE MR Imaging of Myelin is Significantly Correlated with Disability in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Neuroradiology. 42(5)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Multiple Sclerosis
Biomedical Imaging
Clinical Research
Brain Disorders
Autoimmune Disease
Neurodegenerative
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Neurological
Adult
Aged
Aging
Disability Evaluation
Female
Healthy Volunteers
Humans
Image Processing
Computer-Assisted
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Myelin Sheath
White Matter
Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Clinical sciences
Physical chemistry
Language
Abstract
Background and purposeMR imaging has been widely used for the noninvasive evaluation of MS. Although clinical MR imaging sequences are highly effective in showing focal macroscopic tissue abnormalities in the brains of patients with MS, they are not specific to myelin and correlate poorly with disability. We investigated direct imaging of myelin using a 2D adiabatic inversion recovery ultrashort TE sequence to determine its value in assessing disability in MS.Materials and methodsThe 2D inversion recovery ultrashort TE sequence was evaluated in 14 healthy volunteers and 31 patients with MS. MPRAGE and T2-FLAIR images were acquired for comparison. Advanced Normalization Tools were used to correlate inversion recovery ultrashort TE, MPRAGE, and T2-FLAIR images with disability assessed by the Expanded Disability Status Scale.ResultsWeak correlations were observed between normal-appearing white matter volume (R = -0.03, P = .88), lesion load (R = 0.22, P = .24), and age (R = 0.14, P = .44), and disability. The MPRAGE signal in normal-appearing white matter showed a weak correlation with age (R = -0.10, P = .49) and disability (R = -0.19, P = .31). The T2-FLAIR signal in normal-appearing white matter showed a weak correlation with age (R = 0.01, P = .93) and disability (R = 0.13, P = .49). The inversion recovery ultrashort TE signal was significantly negatively correlated with age (R = -0.38, P = .009) and disability (R = -0.44; P = .01).ConclusionsDirect imaging of myelin correlates with disability in patients with MS better than indirect imaging of long-T2 water in WM using conventional clinical sequences.