Rose Gelineau-Kattner1,2, Tarunya Arun1,
Damian Jenkins1, Morgan Hough1, Jacqueline Palace3,
Mark Jenkinson1
1FMRIB Centre, University of Oxford,
Oxford, United Kingdom; 2Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX,
United States; 3Clinical Neurology, Oxford University and Oxford
Radcliffe Hospitals NHS Trust, United Kingdom
Grey
matter damage is important in the pathology of Primary Progressive Multiple
Sclerosis (PPMS). We scanned 22
patients and 7 controls at baseline, and 2, 50, and 52 weeks. FreeSurfer was
used to segment subcortical grey matter and vertex analysis was performed
with FSLs FIRST to identify differences in surface morphology between
groups. Significant atrophy and correlations with EDSS and/or disease
duration were seen in some structures at baseline and all structures showed
volume reduction over one year. Surface morphology differences were found in
the thalamus and pallidum. Results highlight importance of subcortical
atrophy and structural morphology differences in PPMS.