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Thigh Muscle Volume Measured by Magnetic Resonance Imaging Is Stable Over a 6-Month Interval in Spinal Muscular Atrophy
33
Citations
24
References
2011
Year
Neuromuscular CoordinationMuscle VolumeSpinal DisorderOrthopaedic SurgeryMagnetic Resonance ImagingKinesiologyMuscle InjuryClinical InjuryApplied PhysiologyRadiologyPhysical MedicineThigh Muscle VolumeHealth SciencesImaging AnatomySpinal Cord InjuryMedical ImagingMusculoskeletal ImagingMusculoskeletal FunctionHuman Musculoskeletal SystemNeuromuscular PathologyPhysical TherapyExercise PhysiologyResonanceSpinal Muscular AtrophyMedicine6-Month IntervalNeuromusculoskeletal Disorder
Changes in thigh muscle volume over 6 months were assessed using magnetic resonance imaging in 11 subjects aged 6 to 47 years with spinal muscular atrophy (4 type 2 and 7 type 3; 4 ambulatory and 3 nonambulatory). Muscle volume with normal and abnormal signal was measured using blinded, semiautomated analysis of reconstructed data. Volumes at baseline and 6 months were correlated with clinical function at each epoch. There was minimal increase in normal (0.3 ± 1.4 mL/cm) and total (0.1 ± 1.3 mL/cm) muscle. Muscle volume correlated closely with clinical function. Minimal interval change in muscle volume is consistent with the established clinical history of minimal disease progression over intervals shorter than 1 year. Relative constancy of muscle volume estimation and correlation with established functional measures suggest a role for segmental magnetic resonance imaging as a biomarker of treatment effect in future therapeutic trials.
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