New MRI technique detects Multiple Sclerosis brain changes earlier

New MRI Technique Detects MS Brain Changes Earlier

(A, B) Sample spectra and abnormal metabolic images of myo-inositol (mI), N-acetylaspartate (NAA), and the ratio of mI to NAA (mI/NAA) together with MRI scans in two participants with multiple sclerosis. Red arrow in A indicates region in normal-appearing white matter with higher signal intensity of mI only. Yellow arrow in B indicates region with higher signal intensity of mI and reduced signal intensity of NAA, where no changes or only diffuse changes are visible at T1-weighted MRI (T1w)/ fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) imaging, and green arrow indicates white matter lesions, where elevated mI signal intensity extends FLAIR-visible pathologic findings. i.u. = institutional unit, ppm = parts per million, tCho = total choline, tCr = total creatine. CREDIT Radiological Society of North America

A new neuroimaging technique can detect biochemical changes in the brains of people with multiple sclerosis (MS) early in the course of the disease, paving the way for faster treatment evaluation and other potential benefits, according to a study published in the journal Radiology.

MS is a disease of the central nervous system that can cause fatigue, pain and impaired coordination. It affects nearly 3 million people worldwide, and incidence is rising. There is no cure, but physical therapy and medications can slow its progression.

Lesions to the brain’s signal-carrying white matter are the most readily detectable manifestation of MS on MRI. The lesions, linked to the loss of the protective coating around white matter fibers called myelin, represent only macroscopic tissue damage. A means to find changes in the brain at an earlier microscopic or biochemical stage would be beneficial.

An advanced imaging technique known as proton MR spectroscopy is a promising tool in this effort. MR spectroscopy of the brain can detect several metabolites, or substances produced during metabolism, that have potential relevance for MS.

Researchers in Austria used the technique to compare biochemical changes in the brains of 65 people with MS with those of 20 healthy controls. They deployed an MRI scanner with a powerful 7-Tesla (T) magnet.

The results showed reduced levels of an amino acid derivative called N-acetylaspartate (NAA) in patients with MS. Lower levels of NAA have been linked to impaired integrity of neurons in the brain. People with MS also showed elevated levels of myo-inositol (MI), a compound involved in cell signaling. Higher levels are indicative of substantial inflammatory disease activity.

The metabolic alterations in normal-appearing white matter and cortical gray matter were associated with disability.

Researchers said the results show a potential role for 7T MR spectroscopic imaging in visualizing MS pathology beyond demyelinating lesions.

“MRI of neurochemicals enables the detection of changes in the brain of multiple sclerosis patients in regions that appear inconspicuous on conventional MRI,” said study senior author Wolfgang Bogner, Ph.D., from the High Field MR Centre at the Medical University of Vienna in Vienna, Austria. “The visualized changes in neurochemistry of normal-appearing brain tissue correlated with the patients’ disabilities.”

The changes detected by the new imaging technique have significant clinical applications, according to study lead author Eva Heckova, Ph.D., from the High Field MR Centre at the Medical University of Vienna.

“Some neurochemical changes, particularly those associated with neuroinflammation, occur early in the course of the disease and may not only be correlated with disability, but also be predictive of further progression such as the formation of multiple sclerosis lesions,” she said.

While more work is needed to confirm the results, the results support 7T MR spectroscopic imaging as a valuable new aid in the care of people with MS.

“If confirmed in longitudinal clinical studies, this new neuroimaging technique could become a standard imaging tool for initial diagnosis, for disease progression and therapy monitoring of multiple sclerosis patients and, in concert with established MRI, might contribute to neurologists’ treatment strategies,” Dr. Bogner said.

The researchers are working to further improve the image quality of the new technique and fully integrate it for use in routine clinical MRI scanners.

New MRI Technique Detects MS Brain Changes Earlier

Metabolic maps showing the ratio of myo-inositol to N-acetylaspartate (mI/NAA) clearly depict small subcortical or juxtacortical lesions (circles) that appear inconspicuous at T1-weighted MRI (T1w)/fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) imaging (indicated with arrows in three participants with multiple sclerosis) CREDIT Radiological Society of North America

“In parallel, we will continue our ongoing longitudinal clinical study to validate its ability to detect clinically important pathologic changes in the brain of multiple sclerosis patients and to evaluate the efficacy of different treatment regimens earlier than other currently available clinical tools,” Dr. Heckova said.

Autism screenings in early intervention services can increase diagnoses by 60 percent

Implementing a multi-stage screening process for autism spectrum disorder in early intervention settings may lead to a significant increase in autism detection compared to standard care, particularly among Spanish-speaking children.

Autism screenings in early intervention services can increase diagnoses by 60 percent
Autism screenings in early intervention services can increase diagnoses by 60 percent

Implementing a multi-stage screening process for autism spectrum disorder in early intervention settings may lead to a significant increase in autism detection compared to standard care, particularly among Spanish-speaking children.

Autism typically develops in children before age 3, but less than half of children are accurately diagnosed with autism before age 4. Although pediatric advocates recommend that children at risk of autism receive screening through early intervention (EI) services provided by states, the program often lacks effective screening tools to detect and diagnose this disorder.

Now, a new study led by a Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) researcher found that implementing a multi-stage screening protocol for autism in early intervention services may lead to a 60 percent increase in autism detection, compared to standard screening.

Published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, the study also underscored the importance of monitoring for disparities in autsim. The increased rate of autism detection was nearly twice as high for Spanish-speaking families as for non-Spanish-speaking families, helping to reduce a well-documented health disparity.

The study is the first comprehensive evaluation of autism screening in EI settings and includes comparison with non-screened EI settings. Unlike standard approaches to screening, which are often limited to providing questionnaires for parents, the multi-component screening protocol in this study includes input from parents and EI providers in the decision-making process for a child’s autism diagnosis, as well as training for EI providers and ongoing collaboration between the EI providers and the EI sites’ program directors and research assistants.

“When implemented with appropriate supports and access to diagnostic services, screening can really move the needle on the early detection of autism,” says Dr. Radley Chris Sheldrick, study lead author and research associate professor of health law, policy & management at BUSPH. “If implemented in a culturally sensitive way, it can also reduce health disparities in autism diagnoses, which have been well-documented in the literature.”

For the study, Dr. Sheldrick and colleagues analyzed administrative data that was collected by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and included records for 33,326 children aged 14 to 26 months who were enrolled in services at 12 EI agencies in the greater Boston area from 2012 to 2018. The autism screening was implemented at three of the EI sites, and the researchers used records from the nine non-screened sites for comparison.

Parents or caregivers began the multi-stage screening protocol by completing questionnaires about their children’s social and emotional behavior. If indicated, they and their children then completed an observational assessment known as the Screening Tool for autism in Toddlers and Young Children (STAT) with their EI providers, who received specialized training to administer the STAT. EI providers were also encouraged to participate in the autism diagnostic and feedback evaluations, which occurred in the final stage of the process.

Compared to standard practice, this multi-stage screening process was associated with an additional 8.1 diagnoses per 1,000 children—and an additional 15.4 diagnoses per 1,000 children in Spanish-speaking families. Among non-Spanish-speaking families, the researchers observed a smaller increase in the rate of autism detection, at an additional 6.9 diagnoses per 1,000 children.

In addition to racial disparities, the researchers also observed gender disparities (consistent with prior research) that showed that boys were significantly more likely to be screened and diagnosed with autism than girls: the screening was associated with an additional 14.8 diagnoses among boys versus an additional 0.5 diagnoses among girls.

“We did not anticipate this finding, and we believe it highlights the importance of monitoring all points in the care process—whether or not disparities are expected,” Dr. Sheldrick says, noting that the study was limited to diagnoses. “Further research is needed to ensure equitable access to effective services for those who need them.”

Autism – Study shows fragile X treatment can incur resistance, suggests ways around it

While the brain acquires resistance to continuous treatment with mGluR5 inhibitor drugs, lasting effects may still arise if dosing occurs intermittently and during a developmental-critical period.

On a light green background a white bottle of pills has tipped over and several small white pills have spilled out.


Drugs that inhibit a brain cell receptor, mGluR5, showed promise for treating fragile X syndrome, but patients showed signs of acquiring resistance. A new study finds that resistance indeed emerges in mouse models, but the findings point to new ways drug efficacy could be improved.

Mark Bear, Picower Professor of Neuroscience at MIT, recalls the “eureka moment” 20 years ago when he realized that a severe developmental brain disorder — fragile X syndrome — might be treated with drugs that inhibit a neurotransmitter receptor called mGluR5. The idea, that mGluR5 stimulates excessive protein synthesis in fragile X neurons that disrupts their functions, became well-validated by experiments in his lab and others worldwide using several animal models of the disease.

“There was great anticipation that this would be a breakthrough treatment for this disease,” says Bear, a faculty member of the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory and the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. “Thus, it was a profound disappointment when the first human clinical trials using mGluR5 negative modulators failed to show a benefit.”

This finding led many to question the theory or the usefulness of the animal models, Bear acknowledges. But now a new study in mice provides substantial evidence that this promising treatment for fragile X syndrome missed the mark because the brain builds up resistance, or “tolerance,” to it. Importantly, the research also points to several new therapeutic opportunities that could still turn the tide against fragile X, the most common inherited form of autism.

Bear and his team led by postdoc David Stoppel showed that giving just a few doses early in life, while the brain is still developing, and then not giving further doses as the subjects got older, could produce lasting benefits in cognitive ability. That finding suggests that the timing and duration of mGluR5 inhibition are more important than previously recognized.

“The development of acquired treatment resistance to a medication is nothing new,” says Bear, senior author of the new paper in Frontiers in Psychiatry. “The fact that it happens doesn’t mean that, therefore, you give up all hope. It means that you have to be aware of it.”

In addition to the strategy of administering mGluR5 inhibitors at a young age and then stopping, the study also implies that patients could benefit if dosing were structured with breaks to prevent a buildup of resistance, Bear says. Moreover, the study also suggests that amid treatment resistance, fragile X mice resumed synthesis of an unknown protein that leads to symptoms. Identifying and targeting that protein, Bear adds, could also be a fertile new avenue for drug development.

These new findings follow on a 2020 study in Science Translational Medicine (STM) by Bear’s lab and scientists at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard in which they developed a compound, BRD0705, that acts downstream in the molecular pathway between mGluR5 and protein synthesis. BRD0705 did not incur treatment resistance in mature fragile X mice.

A hard lesson

Fragile X syndrome is caused by a mutation in which repeats of the nucleotides CGG disable a gene’s ability to make the protein FMRP. In the absence of FMRP, neurons exhibit excessive protein synthesis, degraded circuit connections called synapses, and hyperexcitability leading to symptoms such as cognitive disability. In the early 2000s, Bear’s lab recognized that inhibiting the mGluR5 receptor in brain cells could prevent the problems with protein synthesis and treat many fragile X symptoms. After successful animal tests, the treatment was tried in clinical trials.

One participant in the trial of the drug mavoglurant was Andy Tranfaglia of Massachusetts. At the time of treatment eight years ago, he was 24, says his father, Dr. Michael Tranfaglia, medical director of FRAXA Research Foundation, an organization working to find a cure for the disorder.

“Andy had an almost miraculous response to the drug and showed dramatic improvement in virtually all areas of function, behaviorally and cognitively, but he also had significant improvements in motor function and a complete resolution of lifelong, severe gastroesophageal reflux (GERD),” Tranfaglia says. “Unfortunately, after three to four months, the benefits of the treatment began to wane, and continued to decrease over time. The re-emergence of his GERD closely paralleled the return of his other symptoms, though he still showed some benefit after eight months, when the trials ended. This strongly suggested to us the possibility of tolerance to this treatment strategy.”

Indeed, in a 2005 a study in the journal Neuropharmacology by Tranfaglia and researchers at Columbia University showed that in a common test of an mGluR5 inhibitor, whether audio tones led to seizures, found a treatment resistance effect in mature fragile X mice. Until recently, though, the evidence that patients were acquiring treatment resistance wasn’t abundant, Bear says.

In the new study, Bear’s lab replicated the 2005 findings and showed that treatment resistance emerges in two other assays as well. After initial doses of the mGluR5 inhibitor CTEP caused improvements in neural hyperexcitability in the visual cortex, fragile X mice lost that benefit with chronic dosing over the next few days. Fragile X mice also gave up initial progress after chronic dosing in tamping down protein synthesis in a brain region called the hippocampus that is central for memory formation. The results therefore validate the treatment resistance hypothesis by showing it affecting three different tests that involve three different parts of the brain.

Routing around resistance

“This study suggests answers to important questions from the failed fragile X mGluR5 trials and about the preclinical research that inspired them,” Stoppel says. “It also highlights the kinds of experiments that are essential to consider as other therapeutic strategies are developed for Fragile X or other neurodevelopmental disorders. Defining treatment resistance is just the first step, however. Our next goal is to uncover its mechanism and then generate strategies to bypass it altogether. We have some exciting preliminary hypotheses as this work begins.”

Given the evidence that treatment resistance can build, the researchers say, a more effective approach to sustaining benefits from the drugs may be to give patients breaks between doses to allow resistance to subside.

The experiments showing treatment resistance also yielded another important result. In each case, researchers were able to restore the benefits of the medication by adding a drug called CHX, which broadly suppresses protein synthesis. That finding suggests that amid resistance the fragile X mice resumed producing a protein that restored disease symptoms. Bear says a key next step for his lab will be to try to identify that protein.

Treat early, then stop?

The study also followed up on another finding in STM in 2019 by the lab of Peter Kind at the University of Edinborough, which found that administering the drug lovastatin appeared to rescue memory formation and extinction in rats without any signs of treatment resistance. Looking at those results — Bear was a co-author — the MIT team focused on how the first dose was administered to the rats at the young age of five weeks, during a “critical period” of brain development. Bear, Stoppel, and their team reasoned that maybe the first dose produced an enduring effect into adulthood by changing the trajectory of development for the better.

In the new study, the MIT scientists treated some fragile X mice with CTEP a few times 28 days after their birth — roughly equivalent to about 10 years old for humans — and left other Fragile X mice untreated. Then, after no further treatment, when the mice were 60 days of age, the team administered a memory test where the rodents were supposed to first learn that an area was associated with a risk of a mild electric shock, and then learn that the risk had abated. Fragile X mice left untreated during their youth showed difficulty with the test, but fragile X mice who were treated with CTEP while young were much more successful.

Bear says these findings are particularly significant because they replicate the results in Kind’s study using a different drug in a different species. They therefore seem more likely to generalize to other mammalian brains, including humans.

In fact, a new clinical trial of an mGluR5 inhibitor made by the drug company Novartis is underway in young children. Bear says the results from his new study make him feel more encouraged about that trial.

In addition to Bear and Stoppel, the paper’s other authors are Patrick McCamphill, Rebecca Senter, and Arnold Heynen.

FRAXA, The National Institutes of Health, and the JPB Foundation funded the research.

WHO Analgesic Ladder – Pain Management | World Health Organisation Analgesic Ladder (+ Side Effects)

WHO Analgesic Ladder - Pain Management | World Health Organisation  Analgesic Ladder (+ Side Effects) - YouTube


This video goes through the WHO Analgesic Ladder used for pain management as well as what are the side effects of analgesic medications. The World Health Organisation analgesia ladder provides a guide on how to prescribe analgesic drugs, which analgesic drugs to use and how to manage pain based on various patient factors.