MRI characteristics of neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder

Ho Jin Kim(National Cancer Center), Friedemann Paul(National Cancer Center), Marco Aurélio Lana–Peixoto(National Cancer Center), Silvia Tenembaum(National Cancer Center), Nasrin Asgari(National Cancer Center), Jacqueline Palace(National Cancer Center), Eric C. Klawiter(National Cancer Center), Douglas Kazutoshi Sato(National Cancer Center), de Sèze(National Cancer Center), Jens Wuerfel(National Cancer Center), Brenda Banwell(National Cancer Center), Pablo Villoslada(National Cancer Center), Albert Saiz(National Cancer Center), Kazuo Fujihara(National Cancer Center), Suhyun Kim(National Cancer Center), Friedemann Paul(National Cancer Center), Jens Wuerfel(National Cancer Center), Philippe Cabre, Romain Marignier, de Sèze(National Cancer Center), Thomas F. Tedder, Juan P. Garrahan, Silvia Tenembaum(National Cancer Center), Daniëlle van Pelt, Simon Broadley, Albert Saiz(National Cancer Center), Pablo Villoslada(National Cancer Center), Michael Levy, Tanuja Chitnis, Eric C. Klawiter(National Cancer Center), Dean Wingerchuk, Ho Jin Kim(National Cancer Center), Lekha Pandit, Ilya Kister, Maria Isabel Leite, Jacqueline Palace(National Cancer Center), Metha Apiwattanakul, Ingo Kleiter, Naraporn Prayoonwiwat, May Han, Kerstin Hellwig, Brenda Banwell(National Cancer Center), Katja Van Herle, Jacinta M. Behne, Gareth John, D. Craig Hooper, Kazuo Fujihara(National Cancer Center), Ichiro Nakashima, Douglas Kazutoshi Sato(National Cancer Center), Anthony Traboulsee, Michael R. Yeaman, Emmanuelle Waubant, Scott Zamvil, Jeffrey L. Bennett, Marco Aurélio Lana–Peixoto(National Cancer Center), Benjamin Greenberg, Olaf Stüve, Orhan Aktaş, Jens Wuerfel(National Cancer Center), Terry J. Smith, Nasrin Asgari(National Cancer Center), Anu Jacob, Kevin C. O’Connor
Neurology
February 19, 2015
Cited by 647Open Access
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Abstract

Since its initial reports in the 19th century, neuromyelitis optica (NMO) had been thought to involve only the optic nerves and spinal cord. However, the discovery of highly specific anti-aquaporin-4 antibody diagnostic biomarker for NMO enabled recognition of more diverse clinical spectrum of manifestations. Brain MRI abnormalities in patients seropositive for anti-aquaporin-4 antibody are common and some may be relatively unique by virtue of localization and configuration. Some seropositive patients present with brain involvement during their first attack and/or continue to relapse in the same location without optic nerve and spinal cord involvement. Thus, characteristics of brain abnormalities in such patients have become of increased interest. In this regard, MRI has an increasingly important role in the differential diagnosis of NMO and its spectrum disorder (NMOSD), particularly from multiple sclerosis. Differentiating these conditions is of prime importance because early initiation of effective immunosuppressive therapy is the key to preventing attack-related disability in NMOSD, whereas some disease-modifying drugs for multiple sclerosis may exacerbate the disease. Therefore, identifying the MRI features suggestive of NMOSD has diagnostic and prognostic implications. We herein review the brain, optic nerve, and spinal cord MRI findings of NMOSD.


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