detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

doi:10.1007/s00415-021-10854-6...

Autor
Rosenbohm, Angela Tredici, Kelly Braak, Heiko Huppertz, Hans-Jürgen Ludolph, Albert C. Müller, Hans-Peter Kassubek, Jan
Langue
en
Editor

Springer

Categoría

Neurology

Año

2022

fecha de cotización

8/12/2022

Palabras clave
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis diffusion tensor imaging flail arm syndrome magnetic resonance imaging motor neuron disease dti tract-of-interest-based according pattern study white matter analysis patients als
Métrico

Resumen

Background Flail arm syndrome is a restricted phenotype of motor neuron disease that is characterized by progressive, predominantly proximal weakness and atrophy of the upper limbs.

Objective The study was designed to investigate specific white matter alterations in diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data from flail arm syndrome patients using a hypothesis-guided tract-of-interest-based approach to identify in vivo microstructural changes according to a neuropathologically defined amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)-related pathology of the cortico-efferent tracts.

Methods DTI-based white matter mapping was performed both by an unbiased voxel-wise statistical comparison and by a hypothesis-guided tract-wise analysis of fractional anisotropy (FA) maps according to the neuropathological ALS-propagation pattern for 43 flail arm syndrome patients vs 43 ‘classical’ ALS patients vs 40 matched controls.

Results The analysis of white matter integrity demonstrated regional FA reductions for the flail arm syndrome group predominantly along the CST.

In the tract-specific analysis according to the proposed sequential cerebral pathology pattern of ALS, the flail arm syndrome patients showed significant alterations of the specific tract systems that were identical to ‘classical’ ALS if compared to controls .

Conclusions The DTI study including the tract-of-interest-based analysis showed a microstructural involvement pattern in the brains of flail arm syndrome patients, supporting the hypothesis that flail arm syndrome is a phenotypical variant of ALS.

Rosenbohm, Angela,Tredici, Kelly,Braak, Heiko,Huppertz, Hans-Jürgen,Ludolph, Albert C.,Müller, Hans-Peter,Kassubek, Jan, 2022, Involvement of cortico-efferent tracts in flail arm syndrome: a tract-of-interest-based DTI study, Springer

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