Motor cortex functional connectivity is associated with underlying neurochemistry in ALS

Avyarthana Dey(University of Alberta), Collin Luk(University of Alberta), Abdullah Ishaque(University of Alberta), Daniel Ta(University of Alberta), Ojas Srivastava(University of Alberta), Dennell Krebs(University of Alberta), Peter Seres(University of Alberta), Chris Hanstock(University of Alberta), Christian Beaulieu(University of Alberta), Lawrence Korngut(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Richard Frayne(Alberta Health Services), Lorne Zinman(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), Simon J. Graham(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), Angela Genge(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Hannah Briemberg(University of British Columbia), Sanjay Kalra(University of Alberta)
Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
November 15, 2022
Cited by 12Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify structural and neurochemical properties that underlie functional connectivity impairments of the primary motor cortex (PMC) and how these relate to clinical findings in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). METHODS: 52 patients with ALS and 52 healthy controls, matched for age and sex, were enrolled from 5 centres across Canada for the Canadian ALS Neuroimaging Consortium study. Resting-state functional MRI, diffusion tensor imaging and magnetic resonance spectroscopy data were acquired. Functional connectivity maps, diffusion metrics and neurometabolite ratios were obtained from the analyses of the acquired multimodal data. A clinical assessment of foot tapping (frequency) was performed to examine upper motor neuron function in all participants. RESULTS: Compared with healthy controls, the primary motor cortex in ALS showed reduced functional connectivity with sensory (T=5.21), frontal (T=3.70), temporal (T=3.80), putaminal (T=4.03) and adjacent motor (T=4.60) regions. In the primary motor cortex, N-acetyl aspartate (NAA, a neuronal marker) ratios and diffusion metrics (mean, axial and radial diffusivity, fractional anisotropy (FA)) were altered. Within the ALS cohort, foot tapping frequency correlated with NAA (r=0.347) and white matter FA (r=0.537). NAA levels showed associations with disturbed functional connectivity of the motor cortex. CONCLUSION: neurochemistry may represent an effective imaging marker of impaired motor cortex functional connectivity in ALS.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis