In patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), the severity of clinical signs is not closely related to indices of structural brain damage provided by conventional magnetic resonance MR. Accordingly, patients with MS may show symptom recovery while progressively accumulating tissue damage. Changes in functional organization of the cerebral cortex have been reported in functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) studies that have compared the activation patterns during motor, visual, and cognitive tasks of patients with MS with those of healthy controls. fMRI studies on MS have provided the results that are difficult to compare and may be discrepant because of differences in the criteria used for patient selection, the activation paradigm, the experimental design, and the MR acquisition parameters. Nevertheless, they do provide a new, interesting tool that sheds light on how the brain changes its functional organization in response to MS. In patients with MS, functional brain reorganization mainly consists of an increase in the extent of activation of the brain areas used by healthy subjects, as well as the recruitment of additional brain areas. These findings have been interpreted as adaptive or compensatory mechanisms that allow normal performance despite neural damage or loss. However, brain functional activity may also change in response to clinical disability, though the precise role of brain functional changes in MS has yet to fully undersand. Longitudinal studies designed to explore the effects of both rehabilitation and pharmacological agents on brain plasticity might shed light on this issue.

Functional brain reorganization in multiple sclerosis: Evidence from fMRI studies / Pantano, Patrizia; Caterina, Mainero; Caramia, Francesca. - In: JOURNAL OF NEUROIMAGING. - ISSN 1051-2284. - STAMPA. - 16:2(2006), pp. 104-114. [10.1111/j.1552-6569.2006.00029.x]

Functional brain reorganization in multiple sclerosis: Evidence from fMRI studies

PANTANO, Patrizia;CARAMIA, Francesca
2006

Abstract

In patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), the severity of clinical signs is not closely related to indices of structural brain damage provided by conventional magnetic resonance MR. Accordingly, patients with MS may show symptom recovery while progressively accumulating tissue damage. Changes in functional organization of the cerebral cortex have been reported in functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) studies that have compared the activation patterns during motor, visual, and cognitive tasks of patients with MS with those of healthy controls. fMRI studies on MS have provided the results that are difficult to compare and may be discrepant because of differences in the criteria used for patient selection, the activation paradigm, the experimental design, and the MR acquisition parameters. Nevertheless, they do provide a new, interesting tool that sheds light on how the brain changes its functional organization in response to MS. In patients with MS, functional brain reorganization mainly consists of an increase in the extent of activation of the brain areas used by healthy subjects, as well as the recruitment of additional brain areas. These findings have been interpreted as adaptive or compensatory mechanisms that allow normal performance despite neural damage or loss. However, brain functional activity may also change in response to clinical disability, though the precise role of brain functional changes in MS has yet to fully undersand. Longitudinal studies designed to explore the effects of both rehabilitation and pharmacological agents on brain plasticity might shed light on this issue.
2006
cognition; cortical reorganization; fmri; motor activity; multiple sclerosis
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Functional brain reorganization in multiple sclerosis: Evidence from fMRI studies / Pantano, Patrizia; Caterina, Mainero; Caramia, Francesca. - In: JOURNAL OF NEUROIMAGING. - ISSN 1051-2284. - STAMPA. - 16:2(2006), pp. 104-114. [10.1111/j.1552-6569.2006.00029.x]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/238784
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