Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s13023-021-02157-w...

Author
Fu, Jiayu He, Ji Zhang, Yixuan Liu, Ziyuan Wang, Haikun Li, Jiameng Chen, Lu Fan, Dongsheng
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Medicine & Public Health

Year

2022

listing date

3/31/2022

Keywords
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis corneal confocal microscopy small fiber neuropathy corneal nerves inferior whorl length dendritic iwdc cell involvement clinical controls lower whorl peripheral inferior als corneal neuropathy nerve iwl region patients fiber = 0 density
Metrics

Abstract

Background Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder with progressive motor system impairment, and recent evidence has identified the extra-motor involvement.

Small fiber neuropathy reflecting by sensory and autonomic disturbances in ALS has been reported to accompany the motor damage.

However, non-invasive assessment of this impairment and its application in disease evaluation of ALS is scarce.

We aim to evaluate the use of corneal confocal microscopy (CCM) to non-invasively quantify the corneal small fiber neuropathy in ALS and explore its clinical value in assessing disease severity of ALS.

Methods Sixty-six patients with ALS and 64 healthy controls were included in this cross-sectional study.

Participants underwent detailed clinical assessments and corneal imaging with in vivo CCM.

Using ImageJ, the following parameters were quantified: corneal nerve length (IWL) and dendritic cell density (IWDC) in the inferior whorl region and corneal nerve fiber length (CNFL), nerve fiber density (CNFD), nerve branch density (CNBD), and dendritic cell density (CDC) in the peripheral region.

Disease severity was evaluated using recognized scales.

Results Corneal nerve lengths (IWL and CNFL) were lower while dendritic cell densities (IWDC and CDC) were higher in patients with ALS than controls in peripheral and inferior whorl regions ( p  < 0.05).

Additionally, corneal nerve complexity in the peripheral region was greater in patients than controls with higher CNBD ( p  = 0.040) and lower CNFD ( p  = 0.011).

IWL was significantly associated with disease severity ( p  < 0.001) and progression ( p  = 0.002) in patients with ALS.

Patients with bulbar involvement showed significantly lower IWL ( p  = 0.014) and higher IWDC ( p  = 0.043) than patients without bulbar involvement.

Conclusions CCM quantified significant corneal neuropathy in ALS, and alterations in the inferior whorl region were closely associated with disease severity.

CCM could serve as a noninvasive, objective imaging tool to detect corneal small fiber neuropathy for clinical evaluation in ALS.

Fu, Jiayu,He, Ji,Zhang, Yixuan,Liu, Ziyuan,Wang, Haikun,Li, Jiameng,Chen, Lu,Fan, Dongsheng, 2022, Small fiber neuropathy for assessment of disease severity in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: corneal confocal microscopy findings, BioMed Central

Document

Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

Should we consider Systemic Inflammatory Response Index (SIRI) as a new diagnostic marker for rectal cancer?
inflammation rectal surgery overall survival complication significantly diagnostic value cancer rectal 38 siri