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Quantitative Muscle MRI as an Assessment Tool for Monitoring Disease Progression in LGMD2I: A Multicentre Longitudinal Study

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TLDR
Quantitative muscle MRI, using the Dixon technique, could be used as an important longitudinal outcome measure to assess muscle pathology and monitor therapeutic efficacy in patients with LGMD2I.
Abstract
Background: Outcome measures for clinical trials in neuromuscular diseases are typically based on physical assessments which are dependent on patient effort, combine the effort of different muscle groups, and may not be sensitive to progression over short trial periods in slow-progressing diseases. We hypothesised that quantitative fat imaging by MRI (Dixon technique) could provide more discriminating quantitative, patient-independent measurements of the progress of muscle fat replacement within individual muscle groups. Objective: To determine whether quantitative fat imaging could measure disease progression in a cohort of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy 2I (LGMD2I) patients over a 12 month period. Methods: 32 adult patients (17 male;15 female) from 4 European tertiary referral centres with the homozygous c.826C.A mutation in the fukutin-related protein gene (FKRP) completed baseline and follow up measurements 12 months later. Quantitative fat imaging was performed and muscle fat fraction change was compared with (i) muscle strength and function assessed using standardized physical tests and (ii) standard T1-weighted MRI graded on a 6 point scale. Results: There was a significant increase in muscle fat fraction in 9 of the 14 muscles analyzed using the quantitative MRI technique from baseline to 12 months follow up. Changes were not seen in the conventional longitudinal physical assessments or in qualitative scoring of the T1w images. Conclusions: Quantitative muscle MRI, using the Dixon technique, could be used as an important longitudinal outcome measure to assess muscle pathology and monitor therapeutic efficacy in patients with LGMD2I.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Advanced body composition assessment: from body mass index to body composition profiling

TL;DR: The additional ability of MRI to also measure muscle volumes, muscle AT infiltration and ectopic fat, in combination with rapid scanning protocols and efficient image analysis tools, makes quantitative MRI a powerful tool for advanced body composition assessment.
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MRI biomarker assessment of neuromuscular disease progression: a prospective observational cohort study

TL;DR: In pathologically distinct neuromuscular disorders, the comparative responsiveness of MRI outcome measures over 1 year, the validity ofMRI outcome measures by cross-sectional correlation against functionally relevant clinical measures, and the sensitivity of specific MRI indices to early muscle water changes before intramuscular fat accumulation beyond the healthy control range are determined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reducing acquisition time in clinical MRI by data undersampling and compressed sensing reconstruction

TL;DR: This review starts by considering methods of k-space undersampling which have already been incorporated into routine clinical imaging (partial Fourier imaging and parallel imaging), and then explains the basis of using compressed sensing in MRI, and considers the potential impact and obstacles to bringing compressed sensing into routine use in clinical MRI.
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Automatic and quantitative assessment of regional muscle volume by multi-atlas segmentation using whole-body water–fat MRI

TL;DR: To develop and demonstrate a rapid whole‐body magnetic resonance imaging method for automatic quantification of total and regional skeletal muscle volume.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantifying fat replacement of muscle by quantitative MRI in muscular dystrophy

TL;DR: The importance of the outcome measures is considered, the considerations required to make robust measurements and appropriate quality assurance measures are discussed, and the existing literature for cross-sectional and longitudinal cohort studies using these methods in muscular dystrophy is drawn together.
References
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TL;DR: An alternative approach, based on graphical techniques and simple calculations, is described, together with the relation between this analysis and the assessment of repeatability.
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The Timed “Up & Go”: A Test of Basic Functional Mobility for Frail Elderly Persons

TL;DR: This study evaluated a modified, timed version of the “Get‐Up and Go” Test (Mathias et al, 1986) in 60 patients referred to a Geriatric Day Hospital and suggested that the timed “Up & Go’ test is a reliable and valid test for quantifying functional mobility that may also be useful in following clinical change over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical methods for assessing agreement between two methods of clinical measurement

TL;DR: In this article, an alternative approach, based on graphical techniques and simple calculations, is described, together with the relation between this analysis and the assessment of repeatability, which is often used in clinical comparison of a new measurement technique with an established one.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simple proton spectroscopic imaging.

W T Dixon
- 01 Oct 1984 - 
TL;DR: Simple modification of a spin echo imaging pulse sequence generates useful spectroscopic information at 0.35 T and provides new parameters for tissue characterization and improved contrast between some organs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-point dixon technique for true water/fat decomposition with b0 inhomogeneity correction

TL;DR: An enhancement to Dixon's technique is described which can provide error‐free decomposition of water and fat proton images even in the presence of off‐resonance conditions which result from susceptibility differences, demagnetization, or shim errors.
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