Increased brain white matter axial diffusivity associated with fatigue, pain and hyperalgesia in Gulf War illness. - 2013

Available online through MWHC library: 2006 - present

BACKGROUND: Gulf War exposures in 1990 and 1991 have caused 25% to 30% of deployed personnel to develop a syndrome of chronic fatigue, pain, hyperalgesia, cognitive and affective dysfunction. CONCLUSION: The right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus may be a potential biomarker for Gulf War Illness. This tract links cortical regions involved in fatigue, pain, emotional and reward processing, and the right ventral attention network in cognition. The axonal neuropathological mechanism(s) explaining increased axial diffusivity may account for the most prominent symptoms of Gulf War Illness. METHODS: Gulf War veterans (n=31) and sedentary veteran and civilian controls (n=20) completed fMRI scans for diffusion tensor imaging. A combination of dolorimetry, subjective reports of pain and fatigue were correlated to white matter diffusivity properties to identify tracts associated with symptom constructs. RESULTS: Gulf War Illness subjects had significantly correlated fatigue, pain, hyperalgesia, and increased axial diffusivity in the right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus. ROC generated thresholds and subsequent binary regression analysis predicted CMI classification based upon axial diffusivity in the right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus. These correlates were absent for controls in dichotomous regression analysis.


English

1932-6203


*Brain/pa [Pathology]
*Persian Gulf Syndrome/pa [Pathology]
*Persian Gulf Syndrome/pp [Physiopathology]
Adult
Case-Control Studies
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Fatigue/pp [Physiopathology]
Female
Humans
Hyperalgesia/pp [Physiopathology]
Male
Middle Aged
Pain/pp [Physiopathology]
Veterans


MedStar Washington Hospital Center


Medicine/Rheumatology


Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.