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Weekly follow up of acute lesions in three early multiple sclerosis patients using MR spectroscopy and diffusion
Authors:Gabriel Kocevar  Claudio Stamile  Salem Hannoun  Jean-Amédée Roch  Françoise Durand-Dubief  Sandra Vukusic  François Cotton  Dominique Sappey-Marinier
Affiliation:1. CREATIS, UMR5520, U1206 Inserm, université Claude-Bernard-Lyon1, 69621 Lyon, France;2. Nehme and Therese Tohme Multiple Sclerosis Center, American University of Beirut Medical Center, 1107 2020 Beirut, Lebanon;3. Service de radiologie, centre hospitalier Lyon-Sud, hospices civils de Lyon, 69495 Lyon, France;4. Service de neurologie A, hôpital neurologique de Lyon, hospices civils de Lyon, 69677 Lyon, France;5. CERMEP, Imagerie-du-Vivant, université de Lyon, 69677 Lyon, France
Abstract:

Object

Pathophysiological mechanisms underlying multiple sclerosis (MS) lesion formation, including inflammation, demyelination/remyelination and axonal damage, and their temporal evolution are still not clearly understood. To this end, three acute white matter lesions were monitored using a weekly multimodal magnetic resonance (MR) protocol.

Materials and methods

Three untreated patients with early relapsing-remitting MS and one healthy control subject were followed weekly for two months. MR protocol included conventional MR imaging (MRI), diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and localized MR spectroscopy (MRS), performed on the largest gadolinium-enhancing lesion, selected at the first exam.

Results

Mean diffusivity increased and fractional anisotropy decreased in lesions compared to healthy control. Cho/Cr ratios remained elevated in lesions throughout the follow-up. In contrast, temporal profiles of mI/Cr ratios varied between patients’ lesions. For patient 1, mI/Cr ratios were already elevated at the beginning of the follow-up. Patients 2 and 3 ratios increase was delayed by two and five weeks. Blood-brain barrier (BBB) recovery occurred after three weeks.

Conclusion

This multimodal MR follow-up highlighted the complementary role of DTI and MRS in identifying temporal relationships between BBB disruption, inflammation, and demyelination. Diffusion metrics showed high sensitivity to detect inflammatory processes. The different temporal profiles of mI suggested a potential better specificity to monitor pathological mechanisms occurring after lesion formation, such as glial proliferation and remyelination.
Keywords:MRI  MR spectroscopy  MR diffusion  Multiple sclerosis  Acute lesion  Inflammation  MS  multiple sclerosis  WM  white matter  NAWM  normal appearing white matter  MD  mean diffusivity  FA  fractional anisotropy  Cho  choline  Cr  creatine  mI  myo-inositol  BBB  blood-brain-barer  NAA  N-acetyl-aspartate  RR  relapsing-remitting  Gd  gadolinium  HC  healthy control
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