AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the MRI features and clinical characteristics of motor neuron disease (MND) in patients with specific genetic mutations compared to those with sporadic MND and healthy individuals.
  • Patients with the mutation displayed a variety of clinical symptoms, significant cognitive impairment, and distinctive brain atrophy, particularly in the right lateral parietal cortex.
  • Additionally, unique white matter changes were observed in the corticospinal tract and inferior longitudinal fasciculi of mutation carriers, differentiating them from other MND cases.

Article Abstract

Objective: Mutations in the gene are a rare cause of genetic motor neuron disease (MND). Morphologic MRI characteristics of MND patients carrying this mutation have been poorly described. Our objective was to investigate distinctive clinical and MRI features of a relatively large sample of MND patients carrying mutations.

Methods: Eleven MND patients carrying a mutation were enrolled. Eleven patients with sporadic MND (sMND) and no genetic mutations were also selected and individually matched by age, sex, clinical presentation and disease severity, along with 22 healthy controls. Patients underwent clinical and cognitive evaluations, as well as 3D T1-weighted and diffusion tensor (DT) MRI on a 3 Tesla scanner. Gray matter (GM) atrophy was first investigated at a whole-brain level using voxel-based morphometry (VBM). GM volumes and DT MRI metrics of the main white matter (WM) tracts were also obtained. Clinical, cognitive and MRI features were compared between groups.

Results: MND with mutations was associated with all possible clinical phenotypes, including isolated upper/lower motor neuron involvement, with no predilection for bulbar or limb involvement at presentation. Greater impairment at naming tasks was found in TARDBP mutation carriers compared with sMND. VBM analysis showed significant atrophy of the right lateral parietal cortex in patients, compared with controls. A distinctive reduction of GM volumes was found in the left precuneus and right angular gyrus of patients compared to controls. WM microstructural damage of the corticospinal tract (CST) and inferior longitudinal fasciculi (ILF) was found in both sMND and patients, compared with controls, although decreased fractional anisotropy of the right CST and increased axial diffusivity of the left ILF ( = 0.017) was detected only in mutation carriers.

Conclusions: patients showed a distinctive parietal pattern of cortical atrophy and greater damage of motor and extra-motor WM tracts compared with controls, which sMND patients matched for disease severity and clinical presentation were lacking. Our findings suggest that TDP-43 pathology due to mutations may cause deeper morphologic alterations in both GM and WM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9334911PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2022.931006DOI Listing

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