磁化转移成像监测多发性硬化症的进展。

M Filippi
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引用次数: 10

摘要

磁化转移成像(MTI)是一种磁共振成像(MRI)技术,目前用于多发性硬化症(MS)的研究,被认为比传统的t2加权成像具有更高的病理特异性。这篇综述概述了MTI对理解MS进化的主要贡献。单个MS病变的MTI研究证实了t2加权MRI异常的病理异质性,以及未增强的t1加权低信号作为局部严重白质破坏的特异性标志物的潜在作用。利用MIT和钆增强MRI进行的相关横断面和纵向研究显示,不同增强模式的病变中MTI的表现可能不同,MTI异常与新发MS斑块血脑屏障破坏的发生和恢复密切相关。MTI病变负荷(LL)与t2加权MRI病变负荷高度相关,但作为MS病变负荷指标的可靠性有限。另一方面,使用全脑直方图分析从MT扫描中获得的测量值与常规MRI扫描中MS异常的程度高度相关,并且可以很好地预测患者的临床残疾,因为它们对全脑和特定区域的宏观和微观MS病变负担都很敏感。这些数据表明(a) MTI对MS患者不同阶段病变病理及病理演变敏感;(b) MT直方图分析可以提供更全面的MS病变负担评估,因为它包括宏观和微观MS病理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Magnetization transfer imaging to monitor the evolution of multiple sclerosis.

Magnetization transfer imaging (MTI) is a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique that is now used in multiple sclerosis (MS) studies, and is thought to have a higher pathological specificity than conventional T2-weighted imaging. This review outlines the major contributions given by MTI for the understanding of MS evolution.MTI studies of individual MS lesions confirm the pathological heterogeneity of T2-weighted MRI abnormalities and the potential role of unenhanced T1-weighted hypointensities as specific markers of localized severe white matter disruption. Correlative cross-sectional and longitudinal studies using MIT and gadolinium (Gd)-enhanced MRI reveal that MTI findings may vary in lesions with different patterns of enhancement, and that MTI abnormalities are closely related to the onset and recovery of blood-brain barrier disruption in new MS plaques. MTI lesion load (LL) is highly correlated with T2-weighted MRI lesion load, but it has a limited reliability as a measure of MS lesion burden. On the other hand, measures obtained from MT scans using whole-brain histogram analysis are highly correlated with the extent of MS abnormalities on conventional MRI scans, and predict patients' clinical disability well, since they are sensitive to both macro- and microscopic MS lesion burden in the whole brain and in specific regions. These data suggest that (a) MTI is sensitive to different stages of lesion pathology and pathological evolution in MS patients; and (b) MT histogram analysis can provide a more global assessment of MS lesion burden, since it encompasses both macro- and microscopic MS pathology.

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