The Role of the Glymphatic System in Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy: Insights From Advanced Imaging.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Clinical Spine Surgery Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-28 DOI:10.1097/BSD.0000000000001763
Justin K Zhang, Saad Javeed, Jacob K Greenberg, Salim Yakdan, Sama Noroozi Gilandehi, Lubdha M Shah, Rajiv R Iyer, Andrew T Dailey, Erica F Bisson, Mark A Mahan, Marcus D Mazur, Sheng-Kwei Song, Wilson Z Ray
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Study design: Prospective cohort study.

Objective: To provide a primer of the glymphatic system, discuss its potential relevance in evaluating spinal diseases like cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM), and describe possible imaging markers of the glymphatic system derived from advanced diffusion-weighted imaging (dMRI), namely diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and diffusion basis spectrum imaging (DBSI).

Summary of background data: The glymphatic system is a recently described physiological process that plays an integral role in macroscopic waste clearance in the CNS through cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-interstitial fluid (ISF) exchange. Chronic spinal cord compression in CSM leads to pathophysiological consequences that theoretically affect the glymphatic system, and advanced dMRI may be well positioned to characterize these changes.

Methods: This single-center study enrolled participants (control and CSM) from 2018 through 2020. All participants underwent clinical assessments and dMRI, followed by DTI and DBSI analyses, preoperatively and 2 years postoperatively. CSF flow was characterized by DTI-derived apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and ISF flow by DBSI-derived extra-axonal axial diffusivity (EA-AD) and radial diffusivity (EA-RD). Imaging parameters were compared among participants.

Results: Forty-two patients with CSM [23 (55%) mild, 9 (24%) moderate, 10 (21%) severe] and 20 control patients were included. Preoperatively, ADC was significantly lower in CSM (2.59±0.4 µm 2 /ms) than control (3.08±0.34 µm 2 /ms) patients ( P <0.01). Conversely, EA-AD and EA-RD were significantly higher in CSM (2.53±0.33; 0.48±0.13 µm 2 /ms) compared with control (2.27±0.2; 0.40±0.04 µm 2 /ms) patients (both P <0.01). Two years postoperatively, only EA-RD significantly decreased for CSM patients (Δ-0.04±0.12 µm 2 /ms, P <0.01). More severe CSM preoperatively was associated with lower baseline ADC (ρ=0.49, P <0.001) and higher baseline EA-RD (ρ=-0.35, P =0.005).

Conclusions: The pathophysiology of CSM may affect the glymphatic system because of chronic spinal cord compression that decreases CSF bulk flow, leading to compensatory increases in ISF flow. Although research in this topic remains nascent, greater glymphatic system function observed on dMRI may correspond with greater disease burden. Future studies examining the role of the glymphatic system in spinal cord pathology are critical to better understanding how these noninvasive imaging biomarkers can improve patient outcomes in CSM.

Level of evidence: Level II.

淋巴系统在脊髓型颈椎病中的作用:来自高级影像学的见解。
研究设计:前瞻性队列研究。目的:介绍类淋巴系统,探讨其在评估脊髓型颈椎病(CSM)等脊柱疾病中的潜在相关性,并描述高级弥散加权成像(dMRI),即弥散张量成像(DTI)和弥散基谱成像(DBSI)可能衍生的类淋巴系统成像标志物。背景资料概述:淋巴系统是最近被描述的一个生理过程,它通过脑脊液(CSF)-间质液(ISF)交换在中枢神经系统的宏观废物清除中起着不可或缺的作用。CSM的慢性脊髓压迫导致病理生理后果,理论上影响淋巴系统,先进的dMRI可以很好地表征这些变化。方法:该单中心研究于2018年至2020年招募参与者(对照组和CSM)。所有参与者术前和术后2年分别进行临床评估和dMRI, DTI和DBSI分析。脑脊液流量通过dti衍生的表观扩散系数(ADC)表征,ISF流量通过dbsi衍生的轴外轴向扩散系数(EA-AD)和径向扩散系数(EA-RD)表征。比较参与者之间的影像学参数。结果:纳入42例CSM患者[轻度23例(55%),中度9例(24%),重度10例(21%)],对照组20例。术前,CSM患者ADC(2.59±0.4µm2/ms)明显低于对照组(3.08±0.34µm2/ms)。结论:CSM的病理生理可能影响淋巴系统,因为慢性脊髓压迫使CSF体积流量减少,导致ISF流量代偿性增加。虽然这方面的研究尚处于起步阶段,但在dMRI上观察到的更大的淋巴系统功能可能与更大的疾病负担相对应。未来研究淋巴系统在脊髓病理中的作用对于更好地理解这些无创成像生物标志物如何改善CSM患者的预后至关重要。证据等级:二级。
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来源期刊
Clinical Spine Surgery
Clinical Spine Surgery Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.30%
发文量
236
期刊介绍: Clinical Spine Surgery is the ideal journal for the busy practicing spine surgeon or trainee, as it is the only journal necessary to keep up to date with new clinical research and surgical techniques. Readers get to watch leaders in the field debate controversial topics in a new controversies section, and gain access to evidence-based reviews of important pathologies in the systematic reviews section. The journal features a surgical technique complete with a video, and a tips and tricks section that allows surgeons to review the important steps prior to a complex procedure. Clinical Spine Surgery provides readers with primary research studies, specifically level 1, 2 and 3 studies, ensuring that articles that may actually change a surgeon’s practice will be read and published. Each issue includes a brief article that will help a surgeon better understand the business of healthcare, as well as an article that will help a surgeon understand how to interpret increasingly complex research methodology. Clinical Spine Surgery is your single source for up-to-date, evidence-based recommendations for spine care.
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