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MRI Study of Paraspinal Muscles in Patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)

Luca Diamanti, Matteo Paoletti, Umberto Di Vita, Shaun Ivan Muzic, Cristina Cereda, Elena Ballante, Anna Pichiecchio

2020Journal of Clinical Medicine13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: the study of paraspinal muscles is pivotal for the diagnosis and staging of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), and is usually performed by electromyography. OBJECTIVE: to evaluate the role of paraspinal muscle MRI as a diagnostic biomarker in ALS. METHODS: we evaluated T1-w images of newly diagnosed ALS patients (n = 14), age-matched healthy controls (n = 11), patients affected by inflammatory myopathy (n = 10), and lumbar radiculopathy (n = 19), and compared them semiquantitatively by using the Mercuri Scale. RESULTS: a significant difference in the appearance of the psoas muscle was observed between ALS patients and patients with radiculopathy (p = 0.003); after stratifying ALS patients into spinal and bulbar onsets, we found a significant difference in the appearance of the longissimus dorsi muscle between the spinal onset ALS subgroup and bulbar onset ALS subgroup (p = 0.0245), while no difference was found for multifidus (p = 0.1441), iliocostal (p = 0.0655), and psoas muscles (p = 0.0813) between the cohort subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: paraspinal T1-w MRI could help to distinguish spinal ALS patients from healthy and pathological controls. Specifically, the study of longissimus dorsi could play the role of a diagnostic ALS biomarker.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisMagnetic resonance imagingPhysical medicine and rehabilitationAnatomyPathologyRadiologyDiseaseAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ResearchParkinson's Disease and Spinal DisordersGlycogen Storage Diseases and Myoclonus
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