Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy aging

Abstract Background Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) is characterized by pathological iron accumulation in the subcortical nuclei and the cortex. As age-related iron accumulation studies in these structures are lacking in healthy aging, we aimed to characterize the dynamics of a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marlous C. M. van der Weijden, Peter Jan van Laar, Roald A. Lambrechts, Dineke S. Verbeek, Marina A. J. Tijssen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:BMC Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12883-019-1471-7
id doaj-007cf299bbda4bcbbdf01f22eddd8b63
record_format Article
spelling doaj-007cf299bbda4bcbbdf01f22eddd8b632020-11-25T03:34:50ZengBMCBMC Neurology1471-23772019-10-011911810.1186/s12883-019-1471-7Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy agingMarlous C. M. van der Weijden0Peter Jan van Laar1Roald A. Lambrechts2Dineke S. Verbeek3Marina A. J. Tijssen4Department of Neurology, University Medical Center GroningenDepartment of Radiology, University Medical Center GroningenDepartment of Neurology, University Medical Center GroningenDepartment of Genetics, University Medical Center GroningenDepartment of Neurology, University Medical Center GroningenAbstract Background Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) is characterized by pathological iron accumulation in the subcortical nuclei and the cortex. As age-related iron accumulation studies in these structures are lacking in healthy aging, we aimed to characterize the dynamics of age-dependent iron accumulation in subcortical nuclei in healthy aging and selected NBIA cases. This is fundamental to understand the natural age-related iron deposition in the healthy brain prior to using this marker as a potential prognostic or diagnostic tool in neurodegenerative disorders. Methods Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) scans from 81 healthy volunteers (0-79 years) and four genetically confirmed patients suffering from NBIA (2-14 years) were obtained. We scored the presence or absence of pencil lining of the motor cortex and putamen and analyzed the normalized SWI signal intensity ratio (NSIR) in five subcortical nuclei. Results In healthy subjects, an age-dependent increase of pencil lining occurred starting from the second decade of life and was present in all cases at the age of 50. In their first decade, NBIA patients showed no cortical pencil lining, but we did observe putaminal pencil lining at this stage. In healthy subjects, age and NSIR of all nuclei correlated positively and was particularly dynamic in early childhood until young adulthood in the globus pallidus, dentate nucleus and red nucleus, but not in the caudate nucleus and putamen. NBIA patients showed an increased NSIR in the globus pallidus only and not in the other subcortical nuclei compared to age-matched healthy subjects. Conclusions Cortical pencil lining is part of healthy aging. This should be considered when assessing this as a potential marker in NBIA diagnosis and prognosis. Putaminal pencil lining has the potential to become a specific marker for some subtypes of NBIA in the first decade of life, as it was only observed in NBIA and not in age-matched healthy subjects. NSIR in the subcortical nuclei during healthy aging was shown to be dynamic, accentuating the importance of having an age-dependent baseline.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12883-019-1471-7Iron accumulationSusceptibility-weighted imagingCortical pencil liningHealthy agingNBIA
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marlous C. M. van der Weijden
Peter Jan van Laar
Roald A. Lambrechts
Dineke S. Verbeek
Marina A. J. Tijssen
spellingShingle Marlous C. M. van der Weijden
Peter Jan van Laar
Roald A. Lambrechts
Dineke S. Verbeek
Marina A. J. Tijssen
Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy aging
BMC Neurology
Iron accumulation
Susceptibility-weighted imaging
Cortical pencil lining
Healthy aging
NBIA
author_facet Marlous C. M. van der Weijden
Peter Jan van Laar
Roald A. Lambrechts
Dineke S. Verbeek
Marina A. J. Tijssen
author_sort Marlous C. M. van der Weijden
title Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy aging
title_short Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy aging
title_full Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy aging
title_fullStr Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy aging
title_full_unstemmed Cortical pencil lining on SWI MRI in NBIA and healthy aging
title_sort cortical pencil lining on swi mri in nbia and healthy aging
publisher BMC
series BMC Neurology
issn 1471-2377
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) is characterized by pathological iron accumulation in the subcortical nuclei and the cortex. As age-related iron accumulation studies in these structures are lacking in healthy aging, we aimed to characterize the dynamics of age-dependent iron accumulation in subcortical nuclei in healthy aging and selected NBIA cases. This is fundamental to understand the natural age-related iron deposition in the healthy brain prior to using this marker as a potential prognostic or diagnostic tool in neurodegenerative disorders. Methods Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) scans from 81 healthy volunteers (0-79 years) and four genetically confirmed patients suffering from NBIA (2-14 years) were obtained. We scored the presence or absence of pencil lining of the motor cortex and putamen and analyzed the normalized SWI signal intensity ratio (NSIR) in five subcortical nuclei. Results In healthy subjects, an age-dependent increase of pencil lining occurred starting from the second decade of life and was present in all cases at the age of 50. In their first decade, NBIA patients showed no cortical pencil lining, but we did observe putaminal pencil lining at this stage. In healthy subjects, age and NSIR of all nuclei correlated positively and was particularly dynamic in early childhood until young adulthood in the globus pallidus, dentate nucleus and red nucleus, but not in the caudate nucleus and putamen. NBIA patients showed an increased NSIR in the globus pallidus only and not in the other subcortical nuclei compared to age-matched healthy subjects. Conclusions Cortical pencil lining is part of healthy aging. This should be considered when assessing this as a potential marker in NBIA diagnosis and prognosis. Putaminal pencil lining has the potential to become a specific marker for some subtypes of NBIA in the first decade of life, as it was only observed in NBIA and not in age-matched healthy subjects. NSIR in the subcortical nuclei during healthy aging was shown to be dynamic, accentuating the importance of having an age-dependent baseline.
topic Iron accumulation
Susceptibility-weighted imaging
Cortical pencil lining
Healthy aging
NBIA
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12883-019-1471-7
work_keys_str_mv AT marlouscmvanderweijden corticalpencilliningonswimriinnbiaandhealthyaging
AT peterjanvanlaar corticalpencilliningonswimriinnbiaandhealthyaging
AT roaldalambrechts corticalpencilliningonswimriinnbiaandhealthyaging
AT dinekesverbeek corticalpencilliningonswimriinnbiaandhealthyaging
AT marinaajtijssen corticalpencilliningonswimriinnbiaandhealthyaging
_version_ 1724557214683758592