|
Imaging
correlates of axonal swelling in chronic multiple sclerosis brains.
Fisher
E, Chang
A, Fox
RJ, Tkach
JA, Svarovsky
T, Nakamura
K, Rudick
RA, Trapp
BD.
Department
of Biomedical Engineering, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland, OH.
OBJECTIVE:
T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging is a sensitive tool for
monitoring progression of multiple sclerosis, but it does not provide
information on the severity of the underlying tissue damage. Measurement
of T1 hypointensities and magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) can
potentially distinguish lesions with more severe tissue damage. The
objective of this study was to use image-guided pathology to determine
histological differences between lesions that are abnormal only on
T2-weighted images versus lesions that are abnormal on T2-weighted,
T1-weighted, and MTR images.
METHODS: A total of 110 regions were selected from postmortem
magnetic resonance images of 10 multiple sclerosis patients. Regions
were classified into three magnetic resonance imaging-defined
categories: normal-appearing white matter; abnormal on T2-weighted image
only (T2-only); and abnormal on T2-weighted, T1-weighted, and MTR images
(T2T1MTR). Myelin status, lesion activity, astrocytosis, serum protein
distribution, axonal area, and axonal loss were evaluated
histopathologically.
RESULTS: Comparisons between groups showed that T2T1MTR regions
were more likely to be demyelinated (83% compared with 55% of T2-only
regions) and more likely to be chronic inactive lesions (68% compared
with 0% of demyelinated T2-only regions). There was no difference
between T2-only and T2T1MTR regions in axonal area, but there was a
significant difference in axonal count, indicating that axons in the
T2T1MTR regions were enlarged relative to those in T2-only regions.
INTERPRETATION: Axonal swelling and axonal loss were major
pathological features that distinguish T2T1MTR regions from T2-only
regions. Ann Neurol 2007.
PMID:
17427920 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=17427920&itool=pubmed_DocSum |