Interactive Transcript
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Following patients in multiple sclerosis,
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one can look at the imaging features,
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or one can look at patient symptomatology,
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or one can look at a combination of the two.
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So, what imaging features correspond best with
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the patient's long-term disability?
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Number of people have looked at this and the things
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that have shown a strong correlation with
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the expanded disability status scale,
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the EDSS score for patients with multiple sclerosis
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have been things like the volume of black holes.
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What do we mean by black holes?
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We're not looking out into space now.
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What we're looking at with black holes are areas of
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dark signal intensity on T1-weighted scan.
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The concept is that if you have low signal intensity
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on a T1-weighted scan,
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that white matter is basically gone.
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It's not going to remyelinate,
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it's irreversible damage.
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And so,
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these areas where it's dark on a T1-weighted scan,
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which is unusual for multiple sclerosis black,
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is what we refer to as the black holes.
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And if you do volumetric analysis of the black holes,
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it does correlate well with the EDSS score.
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However,
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other people have looked at other aspects of patients
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with multiple sclerosis and their disability.
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There is even stronger correlation with overall
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brain volume.
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And in addition to brain volume,
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gray matter volume seems to do even
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better than brain volume,
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which seems to do even better than
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black hole involvement.
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So in the research world,
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you will see patients receiving MPRAGE or Spoiled
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Gradient Echo whole brain imaging with T1-weighted
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scanning in order to do segmentation of gray
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matter volume, white matter volume,
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black hole volume,
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and
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total brain MS plaque volume.
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And all of these are being evaluated.
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As I mentioned in the segment on
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different research techniques,
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other people are focusing on susceptibility-weighted
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imaging and the quantitative susceptibility mapping in
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order to evaluate brain iron content as another marker
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for neurodegeneration, which correlates
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with the patient's disability.
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So, this would require you to add to your pulse
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sequences for your scanning an MPRAGE
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or SPGR or some 3D flash.
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These are all 3D sequences.
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And also,
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if you're going to look at brain iron,
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a susceptibility-weighted scan,
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that's usually a 3D sequence.
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All these cost you five to six minutes in scan time,
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and so they're not done willy-nilly.
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This is a reference from 2008 looking
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at MS and disability and 3D imaging,
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and you note that gray matter atrophy had
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a very strong relation to disability,
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as is whole brain volume and the T2 lesion volume
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or MS plaque volume and atrophy,
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both predicted deficits.
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