“…However, pathological (Allen & McKeown, 1979) and quantitative MRSI studies (Armspach, Gounot, Rumbach, & Chambron, 1991;Filippi et al, 1995;Gasperini et al, 1996;Loevner et al, 1995) have shown that in patients with clinically definite MS, abnormalities also occur in the NAWM (Arnold et al, 1992;Davie et al, 1997;Davie et al, 1994;Fu et al, 1998;Husted et al, 1994;Narayana et al, 1998). Although the principal finding of MRS studies in patients with MS was a decrease in the NAA peak area, opposite results were obtained for other metabolites (Davie et al, 1994;Davies, Newcombe, Williams, McDonald, & Clark, 1995;De Stefano et al, 1995;Husted et al, 1994;Larsson et al, 1991). Despite the difficulties in interpreting data obtained in vivo, MRS provides direct information about metabolic variations and the damage to or integrity of myelin and axons, which are not revealed by traditional MRI (Arnold et al, 1994;Ferguson, Matyszak, Esiri, & Perry, 1997;Fernando et al, 2004).…”