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Cortical atrophy in ALS is critically associated with neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes

Cortical atrophy in ALS is critically associated with neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes
Cortical atrophy in ALS is critically associated with neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes
Objective:
To characterize the patterns of brain atrophy in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) with and without cognitive and neuropsychiatric symptoms, in comparison to controls and patients with ALS–frontotemporal dementia (FTD).
Methods:
A total of 57 participants (ALS = 22; ALS-FTD = 17; controls = 18) were included, following current ALS and FTD criteria. Patients with ALS were further subclassified into ALS with cognitive and behavioral symptoms (ALS-plus; n = 8) and those without (ALS; n = 14). By definition, ALS-plus did not reach the diagnostic threshold for ALS-FTD. All patients underwent neuropsychological and neuropsychiatric assessments, and underwent a brain MRI. Voxel-based morphometry analysis was conducted to establish patterns of brain atrophy.
Results:
Cortical atrophy in ALS was linked to neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes (ALS-plus vs ALS). Patients with ALS-plus had significant atrophy across motor and somatosensory as well as adjacent frontal and parietal areas, even after strict multiple comparison correction. By contrast, patients with ALS showed no significant cortical atrophy, and only brainstem atrophy. Importantly, atrophy in ALS-plus was not as widespread as in ALS-FTD, with ALS-plus atrophy mostly confined to motor and somatosensory areas, while atrophy in ALS-FTD also included substantial frontal and temporal atrophy.
Conclusions:
The present findings establish that cortical atrophy in ALS is highly dependent upon neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes. Previous inconsistent findings of cortical atrophy in ALS likely relate to the inclusion of cognitively affected patients and patients with pure motor ALS.
0028-3878
1117-1123
Mioshi, Eneida
7e860c34-19cd-468a-9fee-5fe8c5d071fe
Lillo, Patricia
359a4abf-438b-46d1-8716-c9583ed414db
Yew, Belinda
08a568f1-6243-46c4-8ffd-e9c21a6428f0
Hsieh, Sharpley
30aaa0a7-0e74-4836-a5c7-f0152a3cf219
Savage, Sharon
423f65bc-84b4-438e-b78a-0de5cbd58967
Hodges, John R.
7e7a95ab-a65f-42a1-8c01-30917e6b2f3d
Kiernan, Matthew C.
7c00071b-b150-4ddf-a1de-0be728850d39
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Mioshi, Eneida
7e860c34-19cd-468a-9fee-5fe8c5d071fe
Lillo, Patricia
359a4abf-438b-46d1-8716-c9583ed414db
Yew, Belinda
08a568f1-6243-46c4-8ffd-e9c21a6428f0
Hsieh, Sharpley
30aaa0a7-0e74-4836-a5c7-f0152a3cf219
Savage, Sharon
423f65bc-84b4-438e-b78a-0de5cbd58967
Hodges, John R.
7e7a95ab-a65f-42a1-8c01-30917e6b2f3d
Kiernan, Matthew C.
7c00071b-b150-4ddf-a1de-0be728850d39
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d

Mioshi, Eneida, Lillo, Patricia, Yew, Belinda, Hsieh, Sharpley, Savage, Sharon, Hodges, John R., Kiernan, Matthew C. and Hornberger, Michael (2013) Cortical atrophy in ALS is critically associated with neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes. Neurology, 80 (12), 1117-1123. (doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e31828869da).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective:
To characterize the patterns of brain atrophy in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) with and without cognitive and neuropsychiatric symptoms, in comparison to controls and patients with ALS–frontotemporal dementia (FTD).
Methods:
A total of 57 participants (ALS = 22; ALS-FTD = 17; controls = 18) were included, following current ALS and FTD criteria. Patients with ALS were further subclassified into ALS with cognitive and behavioral symptoms (ALS-plus; n = 8) and those without (ALS; n = 14). By definition, ALS-plus did not reach the diagnostic threshold for ALS-FTD. All patients underwent neuropsychological and neuropsychiatric assessments, and underwent a brain MRI. Voxel-based morphometry analysis was conducted to establish patterns of brain atrophy.
Results:
Cortical atrophy in ALS was linked to neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes (ALS-plus vs ALS). Patients with ALS-plus had significant atrophy across motor and somatosensory as well as adjacent frontal and parietal areas, even after strict multiple comparison correction. By contrast, patients with ALS showed no significant cortical atrophy, and only brainstem atrophy. Importantly, atrophy in ALS-plus was not as widespread as in ALS-FTD, with ALS-plus atrophy mostly confined to motor and somatosensory areas, while atrophy in ALS-FTD also included substantial frontal and temporal atrophy.
Conclusions:
The present findings establish that cortical atrophy in ALS is highly dependent upon neuropsychiatric and cognitive changes. Previous inconsistent findings of cortical atrophy in ALS likely relate to the inclusion of cognitively affected patients and patients with pure motor ALS.

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Published date: 19 March 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505159
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505159
ISSN: 0028-3878
PURE UUID: b6853bac-569b-459f-9f02-2173e0533970
ORCID for Michael Hornberger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2214-3788

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Date deposited: 30 Sep 2025 17:27
Last modified: 01 Oct 2025 02:20

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Contributors

Author: Eneida Mioshi
Author: Patricia Lillo
Author: Belinda Yew
Author: Sharpley Hsieh
Author: Sharon Savage
Author: John R. Hodges
Author: Matthew C. Kiernan
Author: Michael Hornberger ORCID iD

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