IMPORTANCE Cognitive impairment is a debilitating symptom of multiple sclerosis (MS) that affects up to 70% of patients. An improved understanding of the underlying pathology of MS-related cognitive impairment would provide considerable benefit to patients and clinicians. OBJECTIVE To determine whether there is an association between myelin damage in tissue that appears completely normal on standard clinical imaging, but can be detected by myelin water imaging (MWI), with cognitive performance in MS. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS In this cross-sectional study, participants with MS and controls underwent cognitive testing and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from August 23, 2017, to February 20, 2019. Participants were recruited through the University of British Columbia Hospital MS clinic and via online recruitment advertisements on local health authority websites. Cognitive testing was performed in the MS clinic, and MRI was performed at the adjacent academic research neuroimaging center. Seventy-three participants with clinically definite MS fulfilling the 2017 revised McDonald criteria for diagnosis and 22 age-, sex-, and education-matched healthy volunteers without neurological disease were included in the study. Data analysis was performed from March to November 2019. EXPOSURES MWI was performed at 3 T with a 48-echo, 3-dimensional, gradient and spin-echo (GRASE) sequence. Cognitive testing was performed with assessments drawn from cognitive batteries validated for use in MS. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The association between myelin water measures, a measurement of the T2 relaxation signal from water in the myelin bilayers providing a specific marker for myelin, and cognitive test scores was assessed using Pearson correlation. Three white matter regions of interest-the cingulum, superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF), and corpus callosum-were selected a priori according to their known involvement in MS-related cognitive impairment. RESULTS For the 95 total participants, the mean (SD) age was 49.33 (11.44) years. The mean (SD) age was 50.2 (10.7) years for the 73 participants with MS and 46.4 (13.5) for the 22 controls. Fortyeight participants with MS (66%) and 14 controls (64%) were women. The mean (SD) years of education were 14.7 (2.2) for patients and 15.8 (2.5) years for controls. In MS, significant associations were observed between myelin water measures and scores on the Symbol Digit Modalities Test
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Cognitive impairment is a core symptom in multiple sclerosis (MS). Damage to normal appearing white matter (NAWM) is likely involved. We sought to determine if greater myelin heterogeneity in NAWM is associated with decreased cognitive performance in MS. METHODS A total of 27 participants with MS and 13 controls matched for age, sex, and education underwent myelin water imaging (MWI) from which the myelin water fraction (MWF) was calculated. Corpus callosum, superior longitudinal fasciculus, and cingulum were chosen as regions of interest (ROIs) a priori based on their involvement in MS‐related cognitive impairment. Cognitive performance was assessed using the Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT). Pearson ́s product moment correlations were performed to assess relationships between cognitive performance and myelin heterogeneity (variance of MWF within an ROI). RESULTS In MS, myelin heterogeneity in all three ROIs was significantly associated with performance on the SDMT. These correlations ranged from moderate (r = −.561) to moderately strong (r = −.654) and were highly significant (P values ranged from .001 to .0002). Conversely, myelin heterogeneity was not associated with SDMT performance in controls in any ROI (P > .108). CONCLUSION Increased myelin heterogeneity in NAWM is associated with decreased cognitive processing speed performance in MS.
Background Rapid myelin water imaging (MWI) using a combined gradient and spin echo (GRASE) sequence can produce myelin specific metrics for the human brain. Spinal cord MWI could be similarly useful, but technical challenges have hindered routine application. GRASE rapid MWI was recently successfully implemented for imaging of healthy cervical spinal cord and may complement other advanced imaging methods, such as diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and quantitative T 1 (qT 1 ). Objective To demonstrate the feasibility of cervical cord GRASE rapid MWI in multiple sclerosis (MS), primary lateral sclerosis (PLS) and neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMO), with comparison to DTI and qT 1 metrics. Methods GRASE MWI, DTI and qT 1 data were acquired in 2 PLS, 1 relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS), 1 primary-progressive MS (PPMS) and 2 NMO subjects, as well as 6 age (±3 yrs) and sex matched healthy controls (HC). Internal cord structure guided template registrations, used for region of interest (ROI) analysis. Z score maps were calculated for the difference between disease subject and mean HC metric values. Results PLS subjects had low myelin water fraction (MWF) in the lateral funiculi compared to HC. RRMS subject MWF was heterogeneous within the cord. The PPMS subject showed no trends in ROI results but had a region of low MWF Z score corresponding to a focal lesion. The NMO subject with a longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis lesion had low values for whole cord mean MWF of 12.8% compared to 24.3% (standard deviation 2.2%) for HC. The NMO subject without lesions also had low MWF compared to HC. DTI and qT 1 metrics showed similar trends, corroborating the MWF results and providing complementary information. Conclusion GRASE is sufficiently sensitive to detect decreased myelin within MS spinal cord plaques, NMO lesions, and PLS diffuse spinal cord injury. Decreased MWF in PLS is consistent with demyelination secondary to motor neuron degeneration. GRASE MWI is a feasible method for rapid assessment of myelin content in the cervical spinal cord and provides complementary information to that of DTI and qT 1 measures.
Background: Myelin water imaging (MWI) was recently optimized to provide quantitative in vivo measurement of spinal cord myelin, which is critically involved in multiple sclerosis (MS) disability. Objective: To assess cervical cord myelin measurements in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) and progressive multiple sclerosis (ProgMS) participants and evaluate the correlation between myelin measures and clinical disability. Methods: We used MWI data from 35 RRMS, 30 ProgMS, and 28 healthy control (HC) participants collected at cord level C2/C3 on a 3 T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner. Myelin heterogeneity index (MHI), a measurement of myelin variability, was calculated for whole cervical cord, global white matter, dorsal column, lateral and ventral funiculi. Correlations were assessed between MHI and Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), 9-Hole Peg Test (9HPT), timed 25-foot walk, and disease duration. Results: In various regions of the cervical cord, ProgMS MHI was higher compared to HC (between 9.5% and 31%, p ⩽ 0.04) and RRMS (between 13% and 26%, p ⩽ 0.02), and ProgMS MHI was associated with EDSS ( r = 0.42–0.52) and 9HPT ( r = 0.45–0.52). Conclusion: Myelin abnormalities within clinically eloquent areas are related to clinical disability. MWI metrics have a potential role for monitoring subclinical disease progression and adjudicating treatment efficacy for new therapies targeting ProgMS.
Purpose of reviewMyelin water imaging (MWI) is generally regarded as the most rigorous approach for noninvasive, in-vivo measurement of myelin content, which has been histopathologically validated. As such, it has been increasingly applied to neurological diseases with white matter involvement, especially those affecting myelin. This review provides an overview of the most recent research applying MWI in neurological syndromes.Recent findingsMyelin water imaging has been applied in neurological syndromes including multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's disease, traumatic brain injury, Parkinson's disease, cerebral small vessel disease, leukodystrophies and HIV. These syndromes generally showed alterations observable with MWI, with decreased myelin content tending to correlate with lower cognitive scores and worse clinical presentation. MWI has also been correlated with genetic variation in the APOE and PLP1 genes, demonstrating genetic factors related to myelin health.SummaryMWI can detect and quantify changes not observable with conventional imaging, thereby providing insight into the pathophysiology and disease mechanisms of a diverse range of neurological syndromes.
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