Abstract
PURPOSE We determined the clinical utility of proton MR spectroscopy in defining the extent of disability in benign versus secondary-progressive multiple sclerosis (MS).
METHODS Thirty patients with clinically definite MS, including 16 patients with benign MS and 14 with secondary-progressive MS, and a group of 13 healthy volunteers were studied with combined stimulated-echo acquisition mode proton MR spectroscopy and MR imaging (all patients received contrast material).
RESULTS Acute enhancing lesions of benign and secondary-progressive MS were characterized by a reduction in N-acetylaspartate (NAA)/choline and NAA/creatine and an increase in inositol compounds/creatine as compared with normal white matter. Such variations were also detected in chronic unenhancing lesions in patients with secondary-progressive MS, although they were not found in chronic unenhancing lesions in patients with benign MS. Chronic lesions of the two forms of the disease have significative differences in NAA and inositol signals.
CONCLUSION Proton MR spectroscopy is able to show metabolic changes occurring in the white matter of patients with MS. Such changes differ according to the phase (acute versus chronic) and the clinical form (benign versus secondary-progressive) of the disease.
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