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Quantitative Assessment of Secondary White Matter Injury in the Visual Pathway by Pituitary Adenomas: A Multimodal Study at 7 Tesla MRI

Authors :
Francesco Padormo
John W. Rutland
James Chelnis
Raj K. Shrivastava
Bradley N. Delman
Priti Balchandani
Annie E. Arrighi-Allisan
Amy Yao
Kuang-Han Huang
Hung-Mo Lin
Cindi K. Yim
Source :
29th Annual Meeting North American Skull Base Society.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2019.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to investigate microstructural damage caused by pituitary macroadenomas by performing probabilistic tractography of the optic tracts and radiations using 7-T diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI). These imaging findings were correlated with neuro-ophthalmological results to assess the utility of ultra-high-field MRI for objective evaluation of damage to the anterior and posterior visual pathways. METHODS Probabilistic tractography employing 7-T DWI was used to reconstruct the optic tracts and radiations in 18 patients with adenomas and in 16 healthy volunteers. Optic chiasm compression was found in 66.7% of the patients and visual defects in 61.1%. Diffusion indices were calculated along the projections and correlated with tumor volumes and results from neuro-ophthalmological examinations. Primary visual cortical thicknesses were also assessed. RESULTS Fractional anisotropy was reduced by 21.9% in the optic tracts (p < 0.001) and 17.7% in the optic radiations (p < 0.001) in patients with adenomas. Patients showed an 8.5% increase in mean diffusivity of optic radiations compared with healthy controls (p < 0.001). Primary visual cortical thickness was reduced in adenoma patients. Diffusion indices of the visual pathway showed significant correlations with neuro-ophthalmological examination findings. CONCLUSIONS Imaging-based quantification of secondary neuronal damage from adenomas strongly correlated with neuro-ophthalmological findings. Diffusion characteristics enabled by ultra-high-field DWI may allow preoperative characterization of visual pathway damage in patients with chiasmatic compression and may inform prognosis for vision recoverability.

Details

ISSN :
2193634X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
29th Annual Meeting North American Skull Base Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........39c67a69595588dfba544745452ef469
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0039-1679447