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Jacqueline Palace

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2 papers
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2

YNIMG Journal 2021 Journal Article

An In-vivo 1H-MRS short-echo time technique at 7T: Quantification of metabolites in chronic multiple sclerosis and neuromyelitis optica brain lesions and normal appearing brain tissue

  • George Tackley
  • Yazhuo Kong
  • Rachel Minne
  • Silvia Messina
  • Anderson Winkler
  • Ana Cavey
  • Rosie Everett
  • Gabriele C DeLuca

Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) allows for the non-invasive quantification of neurochemicals and has the potential to differentiate between the pathologically distinct diseases, multiple sclerosis (MS) and AQP4Ab-positive neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (AQP4Ab-NMOSD). In this study we characterised the metabolite profiles of brain lesions in 11 MS and 4 AQP4Ab-NMOSD patients using an optimised MRS methodology at ultra-high field strength (7T) incorporating correction for T2 water relaxation differences between lesioned and normal tissue. MS metabolite results were in keeping with the existing literature: total N-acetylaspartate (NAA) was lower in lesions compared to normal appearing brain white matter (NAWM) with reciprocal findings for myo-Inositol. An unexpected subtlety revealed by our technique was that total NAA differences were likely driven by NAA-glutamate (NAAG), a ubiquitous CNS molecule with functions quite distinct from NAA though commonly quantified together with NAA in MRS studies as total NAA. Surprisingly, AQP4Ab-NMOSD showed no significant differences for total NAA, NAA, NAAG or myo-Inositol between lesion and NAWM sites, nor were there any differences between MS and AQP4Ab-NMOSD for a priori hypotheses. Post-hoc testing revealed a significant correlation between NAWM Ins:NAA and disability (as measured by EDSS) for disease groups combined, driven by the AP4Ab-NMOSD group. Utilising an optimised MRS methodology, our study highlights some under-explored subtleties in MRS profiles, such as the absence of myo-Inositol concentration differences in AQP4Ab-NMOSD brain lesions versus NAWM and the potential influence of NAAG differences between lesions and normal appearing white matter in MS.

YNICL Journal 2017 Journal Article

Cervical cord myelin water imaging shows degenerative changes over one year in multiple sclerosis but not neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder

  • Anna J.E. Combes
  • Lucy Matthews
  • Jimmy S. Lee
  • David K.B. Li
  • Robert Carruthers
  • Anthony L. Traboulsee
  • Gareth J. Barker
  • Jacqueline Palace

Spinal cord pathology is a feature of both neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) and relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (MS). While subclinical disease activity has been described in MS using quantitative magnetic resonance imaging measures, current evidence suggests that neurodegeneration is absent between relapses in NMOSD, although most evidence comes from brain studies. We aimed to assess cross-sectional differences and longitudinal changes in myelin integrity in relapse-free MS and NMOSD subjects over one year. 15 NMOSD, 15 MS subjects, and 17 healthy controls were scanned at 3T using a cervical cord mcDESPOT protocol. A subset of 8 NMOSD, 11 MS subjects and 14 controls completed follow-up. Measures of the myelin water fraction (fM) within lesioned and non-lesioned cord segments were collected. At baseline, fM in lesioned and non-lesioned segments was significantly reduced in MS (lesioned: p=0. 002; non-lesioned: p=0. 03) and NMOSD (lesioned: p=0. 0007; non-lesioned: p=0. 002) compared to controls. Longitudinally, fM decreased within non-lesioned cord segments in the MS group (−7. 3%, p=0. 02), but not in NMOSD (+5. 8%, p=0. 1), while change in lesioned segments fM did not differ from controls' in either patient group. These results suggest that degenerative changes outside of lesioned areas can be observed over a short time frame in MS, but not NMOSD, and support the use of longitudinal myelin water imaging for the assessment of pathological changes in the cervical cord in demyelinating diseases.