Abstract

Deposition of iron has been recognized recently as an important factor of pathophysiologic change including neurodegenerative processes in multiple sclerosis (MS). We propose that there is an excess accumulation of iron in the deep gray matter in patients with MS that can be measured with a newly developed quantitative MR technique--magnetic field correlation (MFC) imaging. With a 3T MR system, we studied 17 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 14 age-matched healthy control subjects. We acquired MFC imaging using an asymmetric single-shot echo-planar imaging sequence. Regions of interest were selected in both deep gray matter and white matter regions, and the mean MFC values were compared between patients and controls. We also correlated the MFC data with lesion load and neuropsychologic tests in the patients. MFC measured in the deep gray matter in patients with MS was significantly higher than that in the healthy controls (P < or = .03), with an average increase of 24% in the globus pallidus, 39.5% in the putamen, and 30.6% in the thalamus. The increased iron deposition measured with MFC in the deep gray matter in the patients correlated positively with the total number of MS lesions (thalamus: r = 0.61, P = .01; globus pallidus: r = 0.52, P = .02). A moderate but significant correlation between the MFC value in the deep gray matter and the neuropsychologic tests was also found. Quantitative measurements of iron content with MFC demonstrate increased accumulation of iron in the deep gray matter in patients with MS, which may be associated with the disrupted iron outflow pathway by lesions. Such abnormal accumulation of iron may contribute to neuropsychologic impairment and have implications for neurodegenerative processes in MS.

Highlights

  • AND PURPOSE: Deposition of iron has been recognized recently as an important factor of pathophysiologic change including neurodegenerative processes in multiple sclerosis (MS)

  • magnetic field correlation (MFC) measured in the deep gray matter in patients with MS was significantly higher than that in the healthy controls (P Յ .03), with an average increase of 24% in the globus pallidus, 39.5% in the putamen, and 30.6% in the thalamus

  • The increased iron deposition measured with MFC in the deep gray matter in the patients correlated positively with the total number of MS lesions

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Summary

Methods

With a 3T MR system, we studied 17 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 14 age-matched healthy control subjects. We correlated the MFC data with lesion load and neuropsychologic tests in the patients. Subjects We recruited 17 patients (14 women and 3 men) with clinically definite relapsing-remitting MS from consecutive admissions to the MS clinical center in our hospital. Fourteen healthy volunteers (9 women, 5 men; mean age, 39 years; range, 23–55 years) served as control subjects and had no previous history of neurologic diseases and no vascular or other abnormalities seen on T1-weighted and T2-weighted MR images. We conducted a traditional consensus battery that yields measures of executive functions, attention, concentration, verbal ability, psychomotor ability, and memory.

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