Brain : a journal of neurology
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Cervical cord damage is likely to contribute to the accumulation of disability in multiple sclerosis (MS) and can be quantified in vivo using MRI. We used conventional and diffusion tensor (DT) MRI to: (a) define the temporal evolution of intrinsic tissue injury and atrophy in the cervical cord from MS patients, (b) investigate how these two aspects of cord damage are interrelated and (c) assess the correlation of cord MRI metrics with concomitant brain damage and disability. Conventional and DT MRI of the brain and cervical cord were obtained from 42 MS patients and 9 healthy controls at baseline and after a mean follow-up of 2.4 years. ⋯ Baseline cord cross-sectional area (r = -0.40, P = 0.01) and FA (r = -0.40, P = 0.03) correlated with increase in disability at follow-up. This study shows that both progressive tissue loss and injury to the remaining tissue occur in the cervical cord of MS patients, and that these two components of cord damage are not strictly interrelated, thus suggesting that a multiparametric MRI approach is needed to achieve more accurate estimates of such a damage. MS cord pathology also seems to be independent of concomitant brain changes, to develop at different rates according to disease phenotype, and to be associated to medium-term disability accrual.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Mycophenolate mofetil as adjunctive therapy for MMN patients: a randomized, controlled trial.
Multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN) is an immune-mediated disorder characterized by slowly progressive asymmetrical limb weakness. Treatment with immunoglobulins (IVIg) leads to improvement of muscle strength. Anecdotal evidence suggests that immunosuppressive drugs as adjunctive therapy may be beneficial. ⋯ Patients did not experience drug toxicity and none of the patients showed significant disease progression after 12 months. Muscle strength and functional scores after 3 months and anti GM1-IgM titres after 12 months did not change. Adjunctive treatment of MMN patients with MMF at a dose of 1 g twice daily is safe but does not alter disease course or allow significant reduction of IVIg doses.
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There is a need to assess spinal cord involvement in multiple sclerosis with new imaging techniques in order to understand better the underlying pathology. We aimed to evaluate whether quantitative MRI measures, obtained using single-voxel (1)H-MR spectroscopy of the cervical cord and diffusion-based tractography of the major spinal cord pathways, in patients with a cervical cord relapse, differed from controls and correlated with acute disability. Fourteen patients at the onset of a cervical cord relapse with at least one lesion between C1 and C3 were imaged on a 1.5 T scanner and clinically assessed on the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), 9-hole peg test (HPT) and timed 25-foot walk test. ⋯ MR spectroscopy and diffusion-based tractography of the cervical cord provide measures that are sensitive to the tissue damage occurring in this area in patients with a cervical cord relapse. These measures were found to correlate with acute disability. Our findings suggest that it would be worthwhile performing longitudinal studies and extending these novel techniques to other neurological diseases affecting the spinal cord.