Cerebral degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Ojas Srivastava(University of Calgary), Chris Hanstock(University of Alberta), Sneha Chenji(University of Alberta), Dennell Mah(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Dean T. Eurich(University of Alberta), Daniel Ta(McGill University), Peter Seres(McGill University), Collin Luk(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Lorne Zinman(University of Alberta), Agessandro Abrahão(McGill University), Simon J. Graham(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Angela Genge(University of Calgary), Lawrence Korngut(McGill University), Richard Frayne(University of Alberta), Sanjay Kalra(University of Calgary)
Neurology Clinical Practice
October 1, 2019
Cited by 15Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: We investigated cerebral degeneration and neurochemistry in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) using magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). METHODS: -acetyl aspartyl moieties [tNAA]) and gliosis (myo-inositol [Ino]), as well as creatine (Cr) and choline (Cho), were quantified in the midline motor cortex and midline prefrontal cortex. Comparisons were made between patients with ALS and healthy controls. Metabolites were correlated with clinical measures of upper motor neuron dysfunction, disease progression rate, and cognitive performance. RESULTS: In the motor cortex, tNAA/Cr, tNAA/Cho, and tNAA/Ino ratios were reduced in the ALS group compared with controls. Group differences in tNAA/Cr and tNAA/Cho in the prefrontal cortex displayed reduced ratios in ALS patients; however, these were not statistically significant. Reduced motor cortex ratios were associated with slower foot tapping rate, whereas only motor tNAA/Ino was associated with finger tapping rate. Disease progression rate was associated with motor tNAA/Cho. Verbal fluency, semantic fluency, and digit span forwards and backwards were associated with prefrontal tNAA/Cr. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that cerebral degeneration in ALS is more pronounced in the motor than prefrontal cortex, that multicenter MRS studies are feasible, and that motor tNAA/Ino shows promise as a potential biomarker.


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