Islamabad, Jan 2 : Radiology researchers at The University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston (UTHealth) have found evidence that multiple sclerosis affects
an area of the brain that controls cognitive, sensory and motor functioning
apart from the disabling damage caused by the disease's visible
lesions.
The thalamus of the brain was selected as the benchmark for the
study conducted by faculty at the UTHealth Medical School. Lead researchers
include Khader M. Hasan, Ph.D., associate professor, and Ponnada A. Narayana,
Ph.D., professor and director of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in the
Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Imaging; and Jerry S. Wolinsky,
M.D., the Bartels Family and Opal C. Rankin Professor in the Department of
Neurology.
"The thalamus is a central area that relates to the rest
of the brain and acts as the 'post office,' " said Hasan, first author of the
paper. "It also is an area that has the least amount of damage from lesions in
the brain but we see volume loss, so it appears other brain damage related to
the disease is also occurring."
Researchers have known that the thalamus
loses volume in size with typical aging, which accelerates after age 70. The
UTHealth multidisciplinary team's purpose was to assess if there was more volume
loss in patients with multiple sclerosis, which could explain the
dementia-related decline associated with the disease.
"Multiple sclerosis
patients have cognitive deficits and the thalamus plays an important role in
cognitive function. The lesions we can see but there is subclinical activity in
multiple sclerosis where you can't see the changes," said senior author
Narayana. "There are neurodegenerative changes even when the brain looks normal
and we saw this damage early in the disease process."
For the study,
researchers used precise imaging by the powerful 3 Tessla MRI scanner to compare
the brains of 109 patients with the disease to 255 healthy subjects. The
patients were recruited through the Multiple Sclerosis Research Group at
UTHealth, directed by Wolinsky, and the healthy controls through the Department
of Pediatrics' Children's Learning Institute.
Adjusting for age-related
changes in the thalamus, the patients with multiple sclerosis had less thalamic
volume than the controls. The amount of thalamic loss also appeared to be
related to the severity of disability.
"This is looking at multiple
sclerosis in a different way," Hasan said. "The thalami are losing cellular
content and we can use this as a marker of what's going on. If we can find a way
to detect the disease earlier in a more vulnerable population, we could begin
treatment sooner."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Multiple sclerosis linked to different area of brain
Multiple sclerosis linked to different area of brain
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