Cerebellar volume measures may differentiate multiple sclerosis fallers from non-fallers
Taylor N. Takla, Jennie Feldpausch, Erin M. Edwards, Shuo Han, Peter A. Calabresi, Jerry Prince, Kathleen M. Zackowski, Nora E. Fritz

TL;DR
This study shows that cerebellar volume differences can help distinguish multiple sclerosis patients who fall from those who do not.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel application of a parcellation algorithm to identify cerebellar regions linked to fall risk in multiple sclerosis.
Findings
PwMS showed reduced cerebellar volumes in specific regions compared to controls.
MS fallers had more pronounced volumetric differences than non-fallers.
Cerebellar volumes correlated with motor and cognitive performance in PwMS.
Abstract
The cerebellum is a common lesion site in persons with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). Physiologic and anatomic studies have identified a topographic organization of the cerebellum including functionally distinct motor and cognitive areas. This study implemented a recent parcellation algorithm developed by Han et al., 2020 to a sample of PwMS and healthy controls to examine relationships among specific cerebellar regions, fall status, and common clinical measures of motor and cognitive functions. Thirty-one PwMS and 29 age and sex-matched controls underwent an MRI scan and motor and cognitive testing. The parcellation algorithm was applied to all images and divided the cerebellum into 28 regions. Mann-Whitney U tests were used to compare cerebellar volumes among PwMS and controls, and MS fallers and MS non-fallers. Relationships between cerebellar volumes and motor and cognitive function…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Sclerosis Research Studies
