Quantifying Cervical Spinal Cord Pathology of Multiple Sclerosis Patients Using Advanced MRI
The utility of advanced quantitative MRI for assessment of spinal cord tissue damage in multiple sclerosis has not yet been established. In this work, we used T1-mapping as well as quantitative magnetization transfer saturation and echo-planar imaging to quantify the extent of pathologic changes in the cervical cord of multiple sclerosis patients. Our results point to extensive demyelination and axonal loss both in the normal-appearing and lesional cervical cord, as well as to and chronic inflammation of cSCWM lesions in secondary progressive multiple sclerosis. Hence, quantitative spinal cord MRI may provide valuable information about the pathologic substrate of this disease.