Abstract

PurposeEvaluate the specificity and sensitivity of disappearance of susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI) dentate nuclei (DN) hypointensity in oculomotor apraxia patients (AOA). MethodIn this prospective study, 27 patients with autosomal genetic ataxia (AOA (n = 11), Friedreich ataxia and ataxia with vitamin E deficit (n = 4), and dominant genetic ataxia (n = 12)) were included along with fifteen healthy controls. MRIs were qualitatively classified for the presence or absence of DN hypointensity on FLAIR and SWI sequences. The MRIs were then quantitatively studied, with measurement of a ratio of DN over brainstem white matter signal intensity through manual delineation. The institutional review board approved this study, and written informed consent was obtained. In the cross-sectional analysis, the Mann–Whitney test was applied. ResultsQualitatively, the eleven AOA patients presented absence of both DN SWI and FLAIR hyposignals; three dominant genetic ataxia patients had moderate SWI DN hyposignal and absent FLAIR hyposignal; the thirteen remaining subjects presented normal SWI and FLAIR DN hyposignal. Absence of DN SWI hypointensity was 100% sensitive and specific to AOA. Quantitative signal intensity ratio (mean ± standard deviation) of the AOA group (98·96 ± 5·37%) was significantly higher than in control subjects group (76.40 ± 8.34%; p < 0.001), dominant genetic ataxia group (81·15 ± 9·94%; p < 0·001), and Friedreich ataxia and ataxia with vitamin E deficit group (87·56 ± 2·78%; p < 0·02). ConclusionThis small study shows that loss of the normal hypointensity in the dentate nucleus on both SWI and FLAIR imaging at 3 T is a highly sensitive and specific biomarker for AOA.

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