Brain and Behavior (Nov 2020)

Associations between apparent diffusion coefficient values and histopathological tissue alterations in myopathies

  • Hans‐Jonas Meyer,
  • Ilka Schneider,
  • Alexander Emmer,
  • Malte Kornhuber,
  • Alexey Surov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.1809
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives Diffusion‐weighted imaging (DWI) can reflect histopathologic changes in muscle disorders. The present study sought to elucidate possible associations between histopathology derived from muscle biopsies and DWI in myositis and other myopathies. Methods Nineteen patients (10 women, 52.6%) with a mean age 51.43 ± 19 years were included in this retrospective study. Apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC) were evaluated with a histogram approach of the biopsied muscle. The histopathology analysis included the scoring systems proposed by Tateyama et al., Fanin et al., Allenbach et al. and immunhistochemical stainings for MHC, CD68, CD8, and CD4. Results There was a tendency that skewness was lowered with increasing Tateyama score, but it did not reach statistical significance (p = .14). No statistical differences for the other scores were identified. There was a tendency that kurtosis was higher in MHC negative stained patient compared to positive patients, but statistically significance was not reached (p = .07). ADC histogram parameters did not correlate with CD68 and CD8 positive stained cells. There was a trend for skewness to correlate with the amount of CD4‐positive cells (r = .57, p = .07). Conclusion The present study could not identify statistical significant associations between DWI and histopathology in muscle diseases based upon a small patient sample. Presumably, the investigated histopathology scores are more specific for certain disease aspects, whereas ADC values reflect the whole cellularity of the investigated muscle, which might cause the negative results.

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