In multiple sclerosis, gradients of tissue damage severity were found in periventricular areas and proved to change in response to treatment. This work investigates whether these gradual microstructural changes can be detected with high-resolution, whole-brain quantitative T1 mapping and how they compare between two cohorts of early and progressive multiple sclerosis patients. T1 deviations were computed in patients from normative atlases established in a healthy cohort and corrected for age and gender. Results show that a periventricular gradient of abnormal T1 values in normal-appearing white matter is indeed present and increases from early to progressive stages of the disease.
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