RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Functional Homotopic Changes in Multiple Sclerosis with Resting-State Functional MR Imaging JF American Journal of Neuroradiology JO Am. J. Neuroradiol. FD American Society of Neuroradiology SP 1180 OP 1187 DO 10.3174/ajnr.A3386 VO 34 IS 6 A1 Y. Zhou A1 M. Milham A1 X.-N. Zuo A1 C. Kelly A1 H. Jaggi A1 J. Herbert A1 R.I. Grossman A1 Y. Ge YR 2013 UL http://www.ajnr.org/content/34/6/1180.abstract AB BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: CC is extensively involved in MS with interhemispheric dysfunction. The purpose of this study was to determine whether interhemispheric correlation is altered in MS by use of a recently developed RS-fMRI homotopy technique and whether these homotopic changes correlate with CC pathology. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-four patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 24 age-matched healthy volunteers were studied with RS-fMRI and DTI acquired at 3T. The Pearson correlation of each pair of symmetric interhemispheric voxels of RS-fMRI time-series data was performed to compute VMHC, and z-transformed for subsequent group-level analysis. In addition, 5 CC segments in the midsagittal area and DTI-derived FA were measured to quantify interhemispheric microstructural changes and correlate with global and regional VMHC in MS. RESULTS: Relative to control participants, patients with MS exhibited an abnormal homotopic pattern with decreased VMHC in the primary visual, somatosensory, and motor cortices and increased VMHC in several regions associated with sensory processing and motor control including the insula, thalamus, pallidum, and cerebellum. The global VMHC correlates moderately with the average FA of the entire CC for all participants in both groups (r = 0.3; P = .03). CONCLUSIONS: Our data provide preliminary evidence of the potential usefulness of VMHC analyses for the detection of abnormalities of interhemispheric coordination in MS. We demonstrated that the whole-brain homotopic RS-fMRI pattern was altered in patients with MS, which was partially associated with the underlying structural degenerative changes of CC measured with FA. CCcorpus callosumCSTcortical spinal tractFAfractional anisotropyRSFCresting-state functional connectivityRS-fMRIresting-state functional MRIVMHCvoxel-mirrored homotopic correlation