MRI correlates of disability in African-Americans with multiple sclerosis

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Abstract

Objectives: Multiple sclerosis (MS) in African-Americans (AAs) is characterized by more rapid disease progression and poorer response to treatment than in Caucasian-Americans (CAs). MRI provides useful and non-invasive tools to investigate the pathological substrate of clinical progression. The aim of our study was to compare MRI measures of brain damage between AAs and CAs with MS. Methods: Retrospective analysis of 97 AAs and 97 CAs with MS matched for age, gender, disease duration and age at MRI examination. Results: AA patients had significantly greater T2- (p = 0.001) and T1-weighted (p = 0.0003) lesion volumes compared to CA patients. In contrast, measurements of global and regional brain volume did not significantly differ between the two ethnic groups (p>0.1). Conclusions: By studying a quite large sample of well demographically and clinically matched CA and AA patients with a homogeneous MRI protocol we showed that higher lesion accumulation, rather than pronounced brain volume decrease might explain the early progress to ambulatory assistance of AAs with MS. © 2012 Howard et al.

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Howard, J., Battaglini, M., Babb, J. S., Arienzo, D., Holst, B., Omari, M., … Inglese, M. (2012). MRI correlates of disability in African-Americans with multiple sclerosis. PLoS ONE, 7(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043061

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