Volumetric and diffusion MRI abnormalities associated with dysarthria in multiple sclerosis

Author:

Kenyon Katherine H12ORCID,Strik Myrte34,Noffs Gustavo1256,Morgan Angela78ORCID,Kolbe Scott1,Harding Ian H1,Vogel Adam P24691011,Boonstra Frederique M C1,van der Walt Anneke1311

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience, School of Translational Medicine, Monash University , Melbourne, VIC 3004 , Australia

2. Centre for Neuroscience of Speech, University of Melbourne , Parkville, VIC 3052 , Australia

3. Spinoza Centre for Neuroimaging, Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Royal Academy for Arts and Sciences, KNAW , Amsterdam 1105 BK , The Netherlands

4. Melbourne Brain Centre Imaging Unit, Department of Radiology, University of Melbourne , Parkville, VIC 3052 , Australia

5. Department of Neurology, Royal Melbourne Hospital , Parkville, VIC 3052 , Australia

6. Redenlab Inc , Melbourne, VIC 3000 , Australia

7. Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Genomic Medicine, Speech and Language Group , Parkville 3052 , Australia

8. Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, University of Melbourne , Parkville 3052 , Australia

9. Division of Translational Genomics of Neurodegenerative Diseases, Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, University of Tübingen , Tübingen 72076 , Germany

10. Center for Neurology, University Hospital Tübingen , Tübingen 72076 , Germany

11. The Bionics Institute , East Melbourne, VIC 3002 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Up to half of all people with multiple sclerosis experience communication difficulties due to dysarthria, a disorder that impacts the motor aspects of speech production. Dysarthria in multiple sclerosis is linked to cerebellar dysfunction, disease severity and lesion load, but the neuroanatomical substrates of these symptoms remain unclear. In this study, 52 participants with multiple sclerosis and 14 age- and sex-matched healthy controls underwent structural and diffusion MRI, clinical assessment of disease severity and cerebellar dysfunction and a battery of motor speech tasks. Assessments of regional brain volume and white matter integrity, and their relationships with clinical and speech measures, were undertaken. White matter tracts of interest included the interhemispheric sensorimotor tract, cerebello-thalamo-cortical tract and arcuate fasciculus, based on their roles in motor and speech behaviours. Volumetric analyses were targeted to Broca’s area, Wernicke’s area, the corpus callosum, thalamus and cerebellum. Our results indicated that multiple sclerosis participants scored worse on all motor speech tasks. Fixel-based diffusion MRI analyses showed significant evidence of white matter tract atrophy in each tract of interest. Correlational analyses further indicated that higher speech naturalness—a perceptual measure of dysarthria—and lower reading rate were associated with axonal damage in the interhemispheric sensorimotor tract and left arcuate fasciculus in people with multiple sclerosis. Axonal damage in all tracts of interest also correlated with clinical scales sensitive to cerebellar dysfunction. Participants with multiple sclerosis had lower volumes of the thalamus and corpus callosum compared with controls, although no brain volumetrics correlated with measures of dysarthria. These findings indicate that axonal damage, particularly when measured using diffusion metrics, underpin dysarthria in multiple sclerosis.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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