Multimodal imaging in urea cycle-related neurological disease – What can imaging after hyperammonemia teach us?

Author:

Sen Kuntal1,Whitehead Matthew T.23,Gropman Andrea L.13

Affiliation:

1. Division of Neurogenetics and Developmental Pediatrics, Center for Neuroscience and Behavioral Medicine, Children’s National Hospital, Washington, DC, USA

2. Department of Radiology, Children’s National Hospital, Washington, DC, USA

3. George Washington University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC, USA

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Urea cycle-related brain disease may take on variable neuroimaging manifestations, ranging from normal to abnormal with or without a signature appearance. In the past, we have described the usefulness of multimodal imaging in identifying biomarkers of neuronal injury in UCD patients. In this study, we report unique findings in an adolescent male with neonatal-onset OTC deficiency after an episode of hyperammonemia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Multiplanar, multisequence MR imaging (T1WI, T2WI, T2 FLAIR, diffusion weighted images and gradient echo) of the brain was performed on seven separate occasions over the course following the acute illness; first five exams were performed within 28 days of admission and the final two exams were performed approximately 3 and 5 months later. RESULTS: 1.The initial MR revealed increased signal on T2WI in the basal ganglia, claustrum and frontoparietal white matter; which remained stable over time. By the 5th exam, signal changes had developed in frontal cortex; reflecting permanent injury. 2. DTI tractography of the corticospinal tracts displayed revealed diminution of the number of projectional and commissural fibers over time. 3. Blood flow measurements demonstrated hypoperfusion on the fifth exams followed by hyperperfusion on the final two studies. 4. MR spectroscopy demonstrated that glutamine was elevated during hyperammonemia with myoinositol reduction, reflecting osmotic buffering. CONCLUSION: This particular multimodal magnetic resonance neuroimaging showed novel, temporally specific manifestations over the disease course in OTC deficiency. This prospective imaging study expands our understanding of the effect of hyperammonemia on the structure and biochemistry of the nervous system.

Publisher

IOS Press

Subject

General Medicine

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