MAGNETIC-RESONANCE RELAXATION-TIME MAPPING IN MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS - NORMAL APPEARING WHITE-MATTER AND THE INVISIBLE LESION LOAD

被引:111
作者
BARBOSA, S [1 ]
BLUMHARDT, LD [1 ]
ROBERTS, N [1 ]
LOCK, T [1 ]
EDWARDS, RHT [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV LIVERPOOL,DEPT NEUROL SCI,LIVERPOOL L69 3BX,LANCS,ENGLAND
关键词
MRI; MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS; NORMAL APPEARING WHITE MATTER; T-1 AND T-2 RELAXATION TIME; PIXEL MAPPING;
D O I
10.1016/0730-725X(94)92350-7
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Prolonged T-1 and/or T-2 relaxation times (RT) in the normal appearing white matter (NAWM) of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) have been attributed either to a diffuse abnormality, or to ''small lesions'' undetected by visual inspection of conventional MR images. In a comparison of brain slices from five MS patients and five healthy control subjects, we have confirmed that the average T-1 and T-2 RTs obtained from NAWM in patients with MS are significantly prolonged (p <.04). Quantitative pixel-by-pixel mapping shows that this overall prolongation is due to the averaging of RTs from two subfractions of NAWM. In all patients a proportion (average 54% for T-1 and 63% for T-2) of the total white matter pixel sample from each MR brain slice had RT values indistinguishable from those found in the white matter of matched healthy control subjects (i.e., ''normal normal appearing white matter,'' NNAWM). Scattered throughout the NAWM were multiple small areas, often of only one or two pixels, with abnormal RT values. These lesions, which were revealed only by pixel-by-pixel mapping of RT, made up a significant proportion (average 47% for T-1 or 57% for T-2 estimates) of the total (visible plus ''invisible'') lesion load per slice, and of the NAWM (average 36% for T-1, 27% for T-2), with wide interpatient variability. Further studies of these minute lesions are required to determine their total volume in the brain, their precise nature, evolution and relevance to the functional deficit in MS.
引用
收藏
页码:33 / 42
页数:10
相关论文
共 20 条
  • [1] Lacomis, Osbakken, Gross, Spin lattice relaxation (T<sub>1</sub>) times of cerebral white matter in multiple sclerosis, Magn. Reson. Med., 3, pp. 194-202, (1986)
  • [2] Ormerod, Miller, McDonald, Du Boulay, Rudge, Kendall, Moseley, Johnson, Tofts, Halliday, Bronstein, Scaravilli, Harding, Barnes, Zilkha, The role of NMR imaging in the assessment of multiple sclerosis and isolated neurological lesions A quantitative study, Brain, 110, pp. 1579-1616, (1987)
  • [3] Larsson, Frederiksen, Kjaer, Henriksen, Olesen, In vivo determination of T<sub>1</sub> and T<sub>2</sub> in the brain of patients with severe but stable multiple sclerosis, Magn. Reson. Med., 7, pp. 43-55, (1988)
  • [4] Brainin, Neuhold, Reisner, Maida, Lang, Deecke, Changes within the “normal” cerebral white matter of multiple sclerosis patients during acute attacks and during high dose cortisone therapy assessed by means of quantitative MRI, J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr., 52, pp. 1355-1359, (1989)
  • [5] Kesselring, Miller, MacManus, Johnson, Milligan, Scolding, Compston, McDonald, Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging in multiple sclerosis: the effect of high dose methyl-prednisolone, J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr., 52, pp. 14-17, (1989)
  • [6] Miller, Johnson, Tofts, MacManus, McDonald, Precise relaxation time measurements of normal-appearing white matter in inflammatory central nervous system disease, Magn. Reson. Med., 11, pp. 331-336, (1989)
  • [7] Sappey-Marinier, High resolution NMR spectroscopy of cerebral white matter in multiple sclerosis, Magn. Reson. Med., 15, pp. 229-239, (1990)
  • [8] Armspach, Gounot, Rumbach, Chambron, In vivo determination of multiexponential T<sub>2</sub> relaxation times in the brain of patients with multiple sclerosis, Magn. Reson. Imaging, 9, pp. 107-113, (1991)
  • [9] Rumbach, Armspach, Gounot, Namer, Chambron, Warter, Collard, Nuclear magnetic resonance T<sub>2</sub> relaxation times in multiple sclerosis, J. Neurol. Sci., 104, pp. 176-181, (1991)
  • [10] Haughton, Yetkin, Rao, Rimm, Fischer, Papke, Breger, Khatri, Quantitative MR in the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, Magn. Reson. Med., 26, pp. 71-78, (1992)