Title of article :
Unfolding the long-term pathophysiological processes following an acute inflammatory demyelinating lesion of multiple sclerosis
Author/Authors :
Zaaraoui، نويسنده , , Wafaa and Rico، نويسنده , , Audrey and Audoin، نويسنده , , Bertrand and Reuter، نويسنده , , Françoise and Malikova، نويسنده , , Irina and Soulier، نويسنده , , Elisabeth and Viout، نويسنده , , Patrick and Le Fur، نويسنده , , Yann and Confort-Gouny، نويسنده , , Sylviane and Cozzone، نويسنده , , Patrick J. and Pelletier، نويسنده , , Jean and Ranjeva، نويسنده , , Jean-Philippe، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Background
symptomatic inflammation is a main feature of multiple sclerosis but pathophysiological processes underlying total or partial recovery are poorly understood.
ive
racterize in vivo these processes at molecular, structural and functional levels using multimodal MR methods.
s
oimaging 3-year follow-up (Weeks 0, 3, 11, 29, 59 and 169) was conducted on a 41-year-old woman presenting at baseline with a large acute demyelinating lesion of multiple sclerosis. Conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), magnetization transfer imaging, diffusion-weighted imaging, functional MRI and magnetic resonance spectroscopy were conducted at 1.5 T.
s
t presenting with subacute left hemiplegia recovered progressively (expended disability status scale 7 to 5.5). The MR exploration demonstrated structural functional and metabolic impairments at baseline. Despite restoration of the blood brain barrier integrity, high lactate levels persisted for several weeks concomitant with glial activation. Slow and progressive structural and metabolic restorations occurred from baseline to W169 (lesion volume −64%; apparent diffusion coefficient −14.7%, magnetization transfer ratio +14%, choline −51%, lipids −78%, N-acetylaspartate +77%) while functionality of the motor system recovered.
sions
odal MRI/MRS evidenced long-term dynamics recovery processes involving tissue repair, glial activation, recovery of neuronal function and functional systems. This may impact on customized rehabilitation strategies generally focused on the first months following the onset of symptoms.
Keywords :
human , Brain , MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS , Recovery , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , FMRI , Magnetic resonance spectroscopy , inflammation
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging