1. Lower self-report fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with localized white matter tract disruption between amygdala, temporal pole, insula, and other connected structures.
- Author
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Fuchs TA, Vaughn CB, Benedict RHB, Weinstock-Guttman B, Choudhery S, Carolus K, Rooney P, Ashton K, P Ramasamy D, Jakimovski D, Zivadinov R, and Dwyer MG
- Subjects
- Amygdala diagnostic imaging, Amygdala pathology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex pathology, Depression complications, Depression diagnostic imaging, Depression pathology, Fatigue complications, Fatigue diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis complications, Multiple Sclerosis diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways pathology, Self Report, Severity of Illness Index, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Temporal Lobe pathology, White Matter diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Fatigue pathology, Fatigue psychology, Multiple Sclerosis pathology, Multiple Sclerosis psychology, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background: Fatigue, a frequent and disabling symptom for people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), inconsistently correlates with white matter (WM) pathology. Network-based analysis, accounting for the manner in which lesions disrupt networks of structurally connected gray matter (GM) regions, may provide additional insight., Objective: To identify patterns of WM tract disruption which explain self-reported fatigue severity in PwMS., Methods: 137 PwMS and 50 age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HC) underwent fatigue assessment and brain MRI. Lesion maps were applied to determine the severity of WM tract disruption between pairs of GM regions. Then, the Network-Based-Statistics tool was applied to identify structural networks whose disruption explained fatigue severity. To determine whether these networks explain unique variance above conventional MRI measures and depression, regressions were applied controlling for age, sex, brain volume, T2-lesion volume, and depression., Results: Patient-perceived fatigue in PwMS was positively associated with overall lesion burden (β = 0.563, p-value < 0.001). In contrast, localized disruptions in WM tracts between regions including the amygdala, insula, hippocampus, putamen, temporal pole, caudal-middle-frontal gyrus, rostral-middle-frontal gyrus, inferior-parietal gyrus, and banks of the superior temporal sulcus were significantly negatively correlated with fatigue in PwMS (β = -0.586, p-value < 0.001). Average disruption within this specific, localized network explained significant additional variance in fatigue above what was otherwise explained by depression and conventional MRI measures of neuropathology (ΔR
2 = 0.078, p-value < 0.001)., Conclusion: Although overall lesion burden correlates positively with fatigue in PwMS, localized WM damage between the amygdala, temporal pole, and other connected structures is associated with lower severity of patient-perceived fatigue., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2019
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