History of fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with grey matter atrophy

Standard

History of fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with grey matter atrophy. / Palotai, Miklos; Nazeri, Aria; Cavallari, Michele; Healy, Brian C; Glanz, Bonnie; Gold, Stefan M; Weiner, Howard L; Chitnis, Tanuja; Guttmann, Charles R G.

In: SCI REP-UK, Vol. 9, No. 1, 14.10.2019, p. 14781.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Palotai, M, Nazeri, A, Cavallari, M, Healy, BC, Glanz, B, Gold, SM, Weiner, HL, Chitnis, T & Guttmann, CRG 2019, 'History of fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with grey matter atrophy', SCI REP-UK, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 14781. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51110-2

APA

Palotai, M., Nazeri, A., Cavallari, M., Healy, B. C., Glanz, B., Gold, S. M., Weiner, H. L., Chitnis, T., & Guttmann, C. R. G. (2019). History of fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with grey matter atrophy. SCI REP-UK, 9(1), 14781. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51110-2

Vancouver

Palotai M, Nazeri A, Cavallari M, Healy BC, Glanz B, Gold SM et al. History of fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with grey matter atrophy. SCI REP-UK. 2019 Oct 14;9(1):14781. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51110-2

Bibtex

@article{ec8d31f0aff84b17a905e60bb5e16cb5,
title = "History of fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with grey matter atrophy",
abstract = "Fatigue in multiple sclerosis (MS) has been associated with brain damage with low replicability. Temporal fatigue fluctuations have not been considered. We assessed whether sustained fatigue (SF) associates more strongly with grey matter (GM) changes than reversible fatigue (RF). Patients were stratified into three groups according to historical fatigue levels: SF (n = 30, i.e. patients who reported fatigue at the latest ≥2 assessments), RF (n = 31, i.e. patients not fatigued at the latest assessment, but reported fatigue previously), and never fatigued (NF, n = 37). Groups were compared for brain GM volume using cross-sectional voxel-based and volumetric analyses of 3T T1-weighted MRI. Confounding effects of depression and related medications were also investigated. SF and RF patients showed similar anatomical distribution of GM atrophy. While we robustly replicated the anatomical patterns of GM atrophy described in previous work, we also found an association between hippocampal atrophy and fatigue. Depression showed confounding effects in frontal, parietal, occipital, accumbal and thalamic regions. Assessed treatments showed confounding effects in frontal, parietal and striatal areas. Our results suggest that history of clinically-relevant fatigue in currently non-fatigued patients is associated with GM atrophy, potentially explaining inconsistent findings of previous studies that stratified patients using a single fatigue assessment.",
author = "Miklos Palotai and Aria Nazeri and Michele Cavallari and Healy, {Brian C} and Bonnie Glanz and Gold, {Stefan M} and Weiner, {Howard L} and Tanuja Chitnis and Guttmann, {Charles R G}",
year = "2019",
month = oct,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1038/s41598-019-51110-2",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "14781",
journal = "SCI REP-UK",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - History of fatigue in multiple sclerosis is associated with grey matter atrophy

AU - Palotai, Miklos

AU - Nazeri, Aria

AU - Cavallari, Michele

AU - Healy, Brian C

AU - Glanz, Bonnie

AU - Gold, Stefan M

AU - Weiner, Howard L

AU - Chitnis, Tanuja

AU - Guttmann, Charles R G

PY - 2019/10/14

Y1 - 2019/10/14

N2 - Fatigue in multiple sclerosis (MS) has been associated with brain damage with low replicability. Temporal fatigue fluctuations have not been considered. We assessed whether sustained fatigue (SF) associates more strongly with grey matter (GM) changes than reversible fatigue (RF). Patients were stratified into three groups according to historical fatigue levels: SF (n = 30, i.e. patients who reported fatigue at the latest ≥2 assessments), RF (n = 31, i.e. patients not fatigued at the latest assessment, but reported fatigue previously), and never fatigued (NF, n = 37). Groups were compared for brain GM volume using cross-sectional voxel-based and volumetric analyses of 3T T1-weighted MRI. Confounding effects of depression and related medications were also investigated. SF and RF patients showed similar anatomical distribution of GM atrophy. While we robustly replicated the anatomical patterns of GM atrophy described in previous work, we also found an association between hippocampal atrophy and fatigue. Depression showed confounding effects in frontal, parietal, occipital, accumbal and thalamic regions. Assessed treatments showed confounding effects in frontal, parietal and striatal areas. Our results suggest that history of clinically-relevant fatigue in currently non-fatigued patients is associated with GM atrophy, potentially explaining inconsistent findings of previous studies that stratified patients using a single fatigue assessment.

AB - Fatigue in multiple sclerosis (MS) has been associated with brain damage with low replicability. Temporal fatigue fluctuations have not been considered. We assessed whether sustained fatigue (SF) associates more strongly with grey matter (GM) changes than reversible fatigue (RF). Patients were stratified into three groups according to historical fatigue levels: SF (n = 30, i.e. patients who reported fatigue at the latest ≥2 assessments), RF (n = 31, i.e. patients not fatigued at the latest assessment, but reported fatigue previously), and never fatigued (NF, n = 37). Groups were compared for brain GM volume using cross-sectional voxel-based and volumetric analyses of 3T T1-weighted MRI. Confounding effects of depression and related medications were also investigated. SF and RF patients showed similar anatomical distribution of GM atrophy. While we robustly replicated the anatomical patterns of GM atrophy described in previous work, we also found an association between hippocampal atrophy and fatigue. Depression showed confounding effects in frontal, parietal, occipital, accumbal and thalamic regions. Assessed treatments showed confounding effects in frontal, parietal and striatal areas. Our results suggest that history of clinically-relevant fatigue in currently non-fatigued patients is associated with GM atrophy, potentially explaining inconsistent findings of previous studies that stratified patients using a single fatigue assessment.

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-019-51110-2

DO - 10.1038/s41598-019-51110-2

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 31611598

VL - 9

SP - 14781

JO - SCI REP-UK

JF - SCI REP-UK

SN - 2045-2322

IS - 1

ER -