These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Graph theory network analysis provides brain MRI evidence of a partial continuum of neurodegeneration in patients with UMN-predominant ALS and ALS-FTD.
    Author: Rajagopalan V, Pioro EP.
    Journal: Neuroimage Clin; 2022; 35():103037. PubMed ID: 35597032.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: Our routine clinical neuroimaging showed hyperintense signal along the corticospinal tract only in some but not all patients with upper motor neuron (UMN)-predominant ALS. ALS patients with CST hyperintensity (ALS-CST+) and those without CST hyperintensity (ALS-CST-) present with nearly identical clinical UMN-predominant symptoms. Some previous studies have suggested that ALS patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) are on a continuum with ALS patients without FTD, while others have not. We aimed to determine whether: (a) ALS-CST+, ALS-CST-, and ALS-FTD patients show differential sites of predominant neurodegeneration occurring primarily cortically in the perikaryon or subcortically in the white matter (WM), or (b) UMN-predominant ALS is on a continuum with ALS-FTD. METHODS: Exploratory whole brain grey matter (GM) voxel-based morphometry and WM network analysis using graph theory approach were performed. In this exploratory study, MRI data from 58 ALS patients (ALS-FTD, n = 15; ALS-CST+, n = 19; ALS-CST-, n = 24) and 14 neurological controls were obtained. RESULTS: Significant differences in degree measures (evaluating WM networks) were observed between ALS patients and controls in frontal, motor, extra-motor, subcortical, and cerebellar regions. GM atrophy was observed only in the ALS-FTD subgroup and not in the other ALS subgroups. CONCLUSION: Although WM network disruption by the ALS disease process showed different patterns between ALS-CST+, ALS-CST-, and ALS-FTD subgroups, there were some overlaps, particularly in prefrontal regions and between ALS-CST+ and ALS-FTD patients. Our preliminary findings suggest a partial continuum of, at least, WM degeneration between these subgroups with predominance of cortical pathology ("neuronopathy") in ALS-FTD patients and subcortical WM pathology ("axonopathy") in ALS-CST+ and ALS-CST- patients.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]