Central vein sign and trigeminal lesions of multiple sclerosis visualised by 7T MRI

Author:

Jing JingORCID,Zhang Zhe,Su Lei,Gao Chenyang,Guo Ai,Liu Xinyao,Wang Huabing,Zhang Xinghu,Liu YaouORCID,Comi Giancarlo,Waubant Emmanuelle,Shi Fu-DongORCID,Tian De-CaiORCID

Abstract

BackgroundAlthough trigeminal nerve involvement is a characteristic of multiple sclerosis (MS), its prevalence across studies varies greatly due to MRI resolution and cohort selection bias. The mechanism behind the site specificity of trigeminal nerve injury is still unclear. We aim to determine the prevalence of trigeminal nerve involvement in patients with MS in a consecutive 7T brain MRI cohort.MethodsThis observational cohort originates from an ongoing China National Registry of Neuro-Inflammatory Diseases. Inclusion criteria were the following: age 18 years or older, diagnosis of MS according to the 2017 McDonald criteria and no clinical relapse within the preceding 3 months. Each participant underwent 7T MAGNETOM Terra scanner (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany), using a 32-channel phased array coil at Beijing Tiantan Hospital. T1-weighted magnetisation-prepared rapid acquisition gradient echoes, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) and fluid and white matter suppression images were used to identify lesions. FLAIR* and T2* weighted images were used to identify central vein sign (CVS) within the trigeminal lesions.Results120 patients underwent 7T MRI scans between December 2021 and May 2023. 19/120 (15.8%) patients had a total of 45 trigeminal lesions, of which 11/19 (57.9%) were bilateral. The linear lesions extended along the trigeminal nerve, from the root entry zone (REZ) (57.8%, 26/45) to the pontine-medullary nucleus (42.2%, 19/45). 26.9% (7/26) of the lesions in REZ showed a typical central venous sign.ConclusionIn this 7T MRI cohort, the prevalence of trigeminal nerve involvement was 15.8%. Characteristic CVS was detected in 26.9% of lesions in REZ. This suggests an inflammatory demyelination mechanism of trigeminal nerve involvement in MS.

Funder

National Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

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