Publications by authors named "Lodewijk de Ruiter"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how childhood and adult diets are linked to multiple sclerosis (MS) risk and progression.
  • It involved 361 people with MS and 125 healthy controls, collecting data through questionnaires on their dietary habits at ages 10 and 50.
  • Findings suggest a poorer diet in childhood is linked to developing MS and its type, while better fruit intake at age 50 correlates with reduced disability and lower MRI lesion volumes.
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Background: The relationship between being overweight during early life and disease course in multiple sclerosis (MS) is unresolved. We investigated the association between being overweight or obese during early life (childhood and adolescence) and MS case status, age of first symptom onset and onset type in people with MS (pwMS) of the same birth year.

Methods: We enrolled 363 PwMS and 125 healthy controls (HC) from Project Y, a Dutch population-based cross-sectional cohort study including all PwMS born in 1966 and age and sex-matched HC.

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Background And Objectives: Excessive activation of certain lipid mediator (LM) pathways plays a role in the complex pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). However, the relationship between bioactive LMs and different aspects of CNS-related pathophysiologic processes remains largely unknown. Therefore, in this study, we assessed the association of bioactive LMs belonging to the ω-3/ω-6 lipid classes with clinical and biochemical (serum neurofilament light [sNfL] and serum glial fibrillary acidic protein [sGFAP]) parameters and MRI-based brain volumes in patients with MS (PwMS) and healthy controls (HCs).

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Cognitive impairment occurs in 40-65% of persons with multiple sclerosis and may be related to alterations in glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotransmission. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine how glutamatergic and GABAergic changes relate to cognitive functioning in multiple sclerosis . Sixty persons with multiple sclerosis (mean age 45.

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Background And Objectives: Although MRI-based markers of neuroinflammation have proven crucial for the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS), predicting clinical progression with inflammation remains difficult. Neurodegenerative markers such as brain volume loss show stronger clinical (predictive) correlations, but also harbor age-related variation that must be disentangled from disease duration. In this study we investigated how clinical disability is related to volumetric MRI measures in a cohort of MS patients and healthy controls (HC) of the same age: Project Y.

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Background: An imbalance of adipokines, hormones secreted by white adipose tissue, is suggested to play a role in the immunopathology of multiple sclerosis (MS). In people with MS (PwMS) of the same age, we aimed to determine whether the adipokines adiponectin, leptin, and resistin are associated with MS disease severity. Furthermore, we aimed to investigate whether these adipokines mediate the association between body mass index (BMI) and MS disease severity.

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Background And Objectives: The specificity of novel blood biomarkers for multiple sclerosis (MS)-related neurodegeneration is unclear because neurodegeneration also occurs during normal aging. To understand which aspects of neurodegeneration the serum biomarkers neurofilament light (sNfL), serum glial fibrillary acidic protein (sGFAP), and serum contactin-1 (sCNTN1) reflect, we here explore their cross-sectional association with disability outcome measures and MRI volumes in a unique cohort of people with MS (PwMS) of the same age.

Methods: sNfL, sGFAP (both singe-molecule array technology) and sCNTN1 (Luminex) were measured in serum samples of 288 PwMS and 125 healthy controls (HCs) of the Project Y cohort, a population-based cross-sectional study of PwMS born in the Netherlands in 1966 and age-matched HC.

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Background: A common problem in resting-state neuroimaging studies is that subjects become drowsy or fall asleep. Although this could drastically affect neurophysiological measurements, such as magnetoencephalography (MEG), its specific impact remains understudied. We aimed to systematically investigate how often drowsiness is present during resting-state MEG recordings, and how the state changes alter quantitative estimates of oscillatory activity, functional connectivity, and network topology.

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Background: To study phenotypic variability in MS patients, well-defined unbiased cohort studies are necessary. The most common and probably most important confounding factor when studying disease phenotype in MS is age.

Objective: To describe study design and subject characteristics of a unique birth cohort (Project Y).

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Background: To investigate smartphone keystroke dynamics (KD), derived from regular typing, on sensitivity to relevant change in disease activity, fatigue, and clinical disability in multiple sclerosis (MS).

Methods: Preplanned interim analysis of a cohort study with 102 MS patients assessed at baseline and 3-month follow-up for gadolinium-enhancing lesions on magnetic resonance imaging, relapses, fatigue and clinical disability outcomes. Keyboard interactions were unobtrusively collected during typing using the Neurokeys App.

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