rss
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry doi:10.1136/jnnp.2009.176263

MR Spectroscopy Indicates Diffuse Multiple Sclerosis Activity During Remission

  1. Ivan Kirov (ivan.kirov{at}nyumc.org)
  1. New York University School of Medicine, United States
    1. Vishal Patil (vishal.patil{at}nyumc.org)
    1. New York University School of Medicine, United States
      1. James Babb (james.babb{at}nyumc.org)
      1. New York University School of Medicine, United States
        1. Henry Rusinek (hr18{at}nyu.edu)
        1. New York University School of Medicine, United States
          1. Joseph Herbert (joseph.herbert{at}nyumc.org)
          1. New York University School of Medicine, United States
            1. Oded Gonen (oded.gonen{at}med.nyu.edu)
            1. New York University School of Medicine, United States
              • Published Online First 21 June 2009

              Abstract

              Objective: To test the hypothesis that diffuse abnormalities precede axonal damage and atrophy in the MRI normal-appearing tissue of relapsing-remitting (RR) multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, and that these processes continue during clinical remission.

              Methods: Twenty-one recently diagnosed mildly disabled (mean disease duration 2.3 years, mean Expanded Disability Status Scale score of 1.4) RR MS patients and 15 healthy matched controls were scanned with MRI and proton MR spectroscopic imaging (1H-MRSI) at 3 T. Metabolite concentrations: N-acetylaspartate (NAA) for neuronal integrity; choline (Cho) for membrane turnover rate; creatine (Cr) and myo-inositol (mI) for glial status were obtained in a 360 cm3 volume-of-interest (VOI) with 3D multivoxel 1H-MRSI. They were converted into absolute amounts using phantom replacement and normalized into absolute concentrations by dividing by the VOI tissue volume fraction obtained from MRI segmentation.

              Results: The patients’ mean VOI tissue volume fraction, 0.92 and NAA concentration, 9.6 mM, were not different from controls’ 0.94 and 9.6 mM. In contrast, the patients’ mean Cr, Cho and mI levels 7.7, 1.9, 4.1 mM were 9%, 14% and 20%, higher than the controls’ 7.1, 1.6 and 3.4 mM (p=0.0097, 0.003 and 0.0023).

              Conclusions: The absence of early tissue atrophy and apparent axonal dysfunction (NAA loss) in these RR MS patients suggests that both are preceded by diffuse glial proliferation (astrogliosis), as well as possible inflammation, de- and re-myelination reflected by elevated mI, Cho and Cr, even during clinical remission and despite immunomodulatory treatment.

              Register for free content

              The full back archive is now available for all BMJ Journals. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006 right back to volume 1 issue 1. Register here to access the free archive of all BMJ Journals.

              Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.

              BMJ Careers - Latest neurology and neurosurgery jobs