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MRI Can Predict Multiple Sclerosis Progression

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 02 Dec 2008
A new study shows that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans used on multiple sclerosis (MS) patients to determine if the disease has affected the brain's gray matter can identify those at risk for progression of disability.

MS affects approximately 400,000 people in the United States and as many as 2.5 million worldwide. It is the most typical cause of progressive disability in young adults. While the cause of the disease remains unknown, it is characterized by damage to the covering over the nerve fibers in the brain and spinal cord, or to the nerve fiber itself.

In an attempt to understand the causes of disease progression, Dr. Rohit Bakshi and his team of researchers has developed new ways to detect gray matter damage. Dr. Bakshi, director of the Laboratory for Neuroimaging Research and an associate professor of neurology and radiology at the Brigham and Women's Hospital (Boston, MA, USA) and Harvard Medical School (Cambridge, MA, USA), led a four-year follow-up study, which revealed that patients with unnatural darkness of gray matter structures as seen on MRI scans carried a higher risk for progression of physical disability. This abnormal darkness is referred to as T2 hypointensity, and is suggestive of excessive iron deposits. Moreover, the researchers found that the new marker of gray matter damage showed closer parallels with patients' clinical status than other established MRI markers of disease severity, including lesions, also known as "plaques," and shrinkage of the brain (atrophy).

"MRI scans obtained from patients with MS are being used to develop measures and techniques that can accurately measure the visible and hidden damage to the brain, especially in gray matter areas, and can more accurately predict the course of the disease," stated Dr. Bakshi.

As a result of the findings, MRI-based measurement of gray matter damage may be used as a surrogate marker of disease progression. Therefore, physicians may be able to identify patients at risk for developing this progressive disease more effectively.

MS has been conventionally viewed as a disease affecting the white matter of the brain, where messages are transferred between the brain's gray matter sections, which control the processing of information. While earlier studies had shown that the brain's gray matter is also affected, research detailing its effects has been limited. Furthermore, current therapies for MS are incomplete, raising the need to better understand disease processes and the biomarkers of disease progression. If excessive iron in gray matter contributes to damage, this would open a new avenue for developing better therapies.

The study was published in the September 2008 issue of the Journal of Neuroimaging.

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Brigham and Women's Hospital



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