35 research outputs found

    Evaluating the Performance of Ultra-Low-Field MRI for In-vivo 3D Current Density Imaging of the Human Head

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    Magnetic fields associated with currents flowing in tissue can be measured non-invasively by means of zero-field-encoded ultra-low-field magnetic resonance imaging (ULF MRI) enabling current density imaging (CDI) and possibly conductivity mapping of human head tissues. Since currents applied to a human are limited by safety regulations and only a small fraction of the current passes through the relatively high-resistive skull, a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) may be difficult to obtain when using this method. In this work, we study the relationship between the image SNR and the SNR of the field reconstructions from zero-field-encoded data. We evaluate these results for two existing ULF MRI scanners, one ultra-sensitive single-channel system and one whole-head multi-channel system, by simulating sequences necessary for current-density reconstruction. We also derive realistic current-density and magnetic-field estimates from finite-element-method simulations based on a three-compartment head model. We found that existing ULF-MRI systems reach sufficient SNR to detect intra-cranial current distributions with statistical uncertainty below 10%. However, they also reveal that image artifacts influence the reconstruction quality. Further, our simulations indicate that current-density reconstruction in the scalp requires a resolution less than 5 mm and demonstrate that the necessary sensitivity coverage can be accomplished by multi-channel devices.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures. This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 68686

    Re-construction of action awareness depends on an internal model of action-outcome timing.

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    The subjective time of an instrumental action is shifted towards its outcome. This temporal binding effect is partially retrospective, i.e., occurs upon outcome perception. Retrospective binding is thought to reflect post-hoc inference on agency based on sensory evidence of the action - outcome association. However, many previous binding paradigms cannot exclude the possibility that retrospective binding results from bottom-up interference of sensory outcome processing with action awareness and is functionally unrelated to the processing of the action - outcome association. Here, we keep bottom-up interference constant and use a contextual manipulation instead. We demonstrate a shift of subjective action time by its outcome in a context of variable outcome timing. Crucially, this shift is absent when there is no such variability. Thus, retrospective action binding reflects a context-dependent, model-based phenomenon. Such top-down re-construction of action awareness seems to bias agency attribution when outcome predictability is low

    Quantitative Susceptibility MRI to Detect Brain Iron in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

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    Purpose To investigate the whole-brain landscape of iron-related abnormalities in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) by using the in vivo MRI technique of quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM). Materials and Methods For this prospective study, 28 patients with ALS (mean age, 61 years; age range, 43-77 years; 18 men [mean age, 61 years; range, 43-77 years] and 10 women [mean age, 61 years; range, 47-74 years]) recruited between January 17, 2014, and September 4, 2015, and 39 matched control subjects (mean age, 61 years; age range, 39-77 years; 24 men [mean age, 62 years; range, 39-77 years] and 15 women [mean age, 59 years; range, 39-73 years]) were examined by using structural and susceptibility 3.0-T MRI techniques. Group data were cross sectionally compared with family-wise error (FWE) corrections by using voxel-based morphometry (random-field theory), cortical thickness analysis (Monte Carlo simulated), subcortical volumetry (Bonferroni-corrected Wilcoxon rank-sum testing), and QSM analysis (cluster-enhanced whole-brain permutation testing and Bonferroni-corrected rank-sum testing in regions of interest). In patients with ALS, a potential relationship between diffusion and susceptibility measurements in the corticospinal tracts (CSTs) was also examined by using Spearman rank-correlation tests. Results Conventional structural measures failed to identify atrophy in the present cohort (FWE P > .05). However, QSM identified several whole-brain abnormalities (FWE P < .05) in ALS. Regionally, higher susceptibility (expressed as means in parts per million ± standard errors of the mean) was confirmed in the motor cortex (ALS = 0.0188 ± 0.0003, control = 0.0173 ± 0.0003; P < .001), the left substantia nigra (ALS = 0.127 ± 0.004, control = 0.113 ± 0.003; P = .008), the right substantia nigra (ALS = 0.141 ± 0.005, control = 0.120 ± 0.003; P < .001), the globus pallidus (ALS = 0.086 ± 0.003, control = 0.075 ± 0.002; P = .003), and the red nucleus (ALS = 0.115 ± 0.004, control = 0.098 ± 0.003; P < .001). Lower susceptibility was found in CST white matter (ALS = -0.047 ± 0.001, control = -0.043 ± 0.001; P = .01). Nigral and pallidal QSM values were cross correlated in ALS (ρ2 = 0.42, P < .001), a phenomenon visually traceable in many individual patients. QSM in the CST in ALS also correlated with diffusion-tensor metrics in this tract (ρ2 = 0.25, P = .007). Conclusion Whole-brain MRI quantitative susceptibility mapping analysis is sensitive to tissue alterations in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis that may be relevant to pathologic changes

    Differential involvement of forearm muscles in ALS does not relate to sonographic structural nerve alterations

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    We aimed to assess whether differential peripheral nerve involvement parallels dissociated forearm muscle weakness in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).The analysis comprised 41 ALS patients and 18 age-, sex-, height- and weight-matched healthy controls. Strength of finger-extension and -flexion was measured using the Medical Research Council (MRC) scale. Radial, median and ulnar nerve sonographic cross-sectional area (CSA) and echogenicity, expressed by the hypoechoic fraction (HF), were determined.In ALS, finger extensors were significantly weaker than finger flexors. Sonographic evaluation revealed peripheral nerve atrophy, affecting various nerve segments in ALS. HF was unaltered.This systematic study confirmed a long-observed physical examination finding in ALS - weakness in finger-extension out of proportion to finger-flexion. This phenomenon was not related to any particular sonographic pattern of upper limb peripheral nerve alteration.In ALS, dissociated forearm muscle weakness could aid in the disease's diagnosis. Nerve ultrasound did not provide additional information on the differential involvement of finger-extension and finger-flexion strength

    Structural and functional papez circuit integrity in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

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    Cognitive impairment in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is heterogeneous but now recognized as a feature in non-demented patients and no longer exclusively attributed to executive dysfunction. However, despite common reports of temporal lobe changes and memory deficits in ALS, episodic memory has been less explored. In the current study, we examined how the Papez circuit—a circuit known to participate in memory processes—is structurally and functionally affected in ALS patients (n = 20) compared with healthy controls (n = 15), and whether these changes correlated with a commonly used clinical measure of episodic memory. Our multimodal MRI approach (cortical volume, voxel-based morphometry, diffusion tensor imaging and resting state functional magnetic resonance) showed reduced gray matter in left hippocampus, left entorhinal cortex and right posterior cingulate as well as increased white matter fractional anisotropy and decreased mean diffusivity in the left cingulum bundle (hippocampal part) of ALS patients compared with controls. Interestingly, thalamus, mammillary bodies and fornix were preserved. Finally, we report a decreased functional connectivity in ALS patients in bilateral hippocampus, bilateral anterior and posterior parahippocampal gyrus and posterior cingulate. The results revealed that ALS patients showed statistically significant structural changes, but more important, widespread prominent functional connectivity abnormalities across the regions comprising the Papez circuit. The decreased functional connectivity found in the Papez network may suggest these changes could be used to assess risk or assist early detection or development of memory symptoms in ALS patients even before structural changes are established

    Hippocampal degeneration in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

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    There is increasing appreciation of non-motor system involvement in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), although its full extent and clinical significance remains to be established. This study tested the hypothesis that memory impairment in patients with ALS is related to hippocampal degeneration. Consecutive patients with ALS (58) and 29 matched controls participated in standardized neuropsychological assessment and magnetic resonance imaging. Patients with ALS performed worse in global cognitive functioning and executive and verbal memory tests (. p < 0.05). The hippocampus was manually segmented in each hemisphere, and volumes were calculated with correction for intracranial volume. Analysis of covariance, controlled for the effect of age and education years, showed significantly smaller hippocampal volume on the right (. p= 0.004) in patients with ALS. Verbal memory test performance correlated with the left hippocampal volume in patients with ALS (. p < 0.05), although there was no significant correlation with tests of executive function and clinical variables underscoring the specificity of the present findings. Hippocampal volume loss and its correlation with the severity of verbal memory impairment highlight significant hippocampal involvement which can occur as a non-motor deficit in patients with ALS

    Novel Pathogenic Sequence Variation m.5789T > C Causes NARP Syndrome and Promotes Formation of Deletions of the Mitochondrial Genome

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    Background and Objectives We report the pathogenic sequence variant m.5789T>C in the anticodon stem of the mitochondrial tRNA for cysteine as a novel cause of neuropathy, ataxia, and retinitis pigmentosa (NARP), which is usually associated with pathogenic variants in the MT-ATP6 gene. Methods To address the correlation of oxidative phosphorylation deficiency with mutation loads, we performed genotyping on single laser-dissected skeletal muscle fibers. Stability of the mitochondrial tRNA(Cys) was investigated by Northern blotting. Accompanying deletions of the mitochondrial genome were detected by long-range PCR and their breakpoints were determined by sequencing of single-molecule amplicons. Results The sequence variant m.5789T>C, originating from the patient's mother, decreases the stability of the mitochondrial tRNA for cysteine by disrupting the anticodon stem, which subsequently leads to a combined oxidative phosphorylation deficiency. In parallel, we observed a prominent cluster of low-abundance somatic deletions with breakpoints in the immediate vicinity of the m.5789T>C variant. Strikingly, all deletion-carrying mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) species, in which the corresponding nucleotide position was not removed, harbored the mutant allele, and none carried the wild-type allele. Discussion In addition to providing evidence for the novel association of a tRNA sequence alteration with NARP syndrome, our observations support the hypothesis that single nucleotide changes can lead to increased occurrence of site-specific mtDNA deletions through the formation of an imperfect repeat. This finding might be relevant for understanding mechanisms of deletion generation in the human mitochondrial genome

    Prefrontal cortical thickness in motor neuron disease

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    Objective: To examine whether the distribution of prefrontal cortical thickness in patients with motor neuron disease is normal or bimodal and how it compares to the normal population. Methods: 158 patients with motor neuron disease (MND) and 86 healthy controls (HC) were enrolled in a prospective, two-center study with a common structural MRI protocol. Cortical thickness measures were extracted for the prefrontal cortex, premotor cortex, motor cortex, and occipital cortex using FreeSurfer, adjusted for age and sex, and tested for normality of distribution. Results: Cortical thickness measures of the bilateral prefrontal, premotor, motor, and occipital cortex were normally distributed in patients and healthy controls. MND-related cortical thinning was observed in the right motor cortex (p = 0.002), reflected in a significantly higher proportion of MND cases being worse than −1 standard deviation of the healthy control mean: 29.1% in the right motor cortex (p = 0.002). Cortical thinning of the left motor cortex was a function of clinical phenotype and physical disability. Left prefrontal cortical thickness was reduced in patients with additional cognitive and/or behavioural deficits compared to MND patients without cognitive deficits. Prefrontal, premotor, motor, and occipital cortical thickness was related to patients' general cognitive abilities. Conclusion: The study shows that prefrontal cortical thickness in MND is normally distributed but shifted towards thinner cortex in MND patients with cognitive and/or behavioural impairment. The distribution of thickness values did not indicate the assumption of a bimodal distribution although patients with comorbid cognitive deficits are more likely to suffer from prefrontal cortical thinning
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