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Brain, Vol. 117, No. 4, 747-757, 1994
© 1994 Guarantors of Brain


research-article

Frontal lobe atrophy in motor neuron diseases

J. A. Kiernan1,0 and J. Hudson2

1Department of AnatomyThe University of Western Ontario London, Canada 2Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences, The University of Western Ontario London, Canada

Correspondence to: 0Correspondence to: Dr J. A. Kiernan, Department of Anatomy, The University of Western Ontario, London, Canada N6A 5C1

Neuronal degeneration in the precentral gyrus alone cannot account for the occurrence of spastic paresis in motor neuron diseases. To look for more extensive cortical atrophy we measured MRIs of the upper parts of the frontal and parietal lobes in 11 sporadic cases of classical amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), eight patients with primary lateral sclerosis (PLS) and an age- and sex-matched group of 49 neuro-logically normal people. None of the patients had overt dementia or other mental diseases. In PLS there is progressive spastic paresis but in contrast to ALS there is no lower motor neuron degeneration. The surface area of the precentral gyri and the amount of underlying white matter in PLS were consistently {small tilde}75% of the normal size. By contrast, there was some shrinkage of the precentral gyri in some of the ALS patients but the mean measurements for the group did not differ significantly from the controls. Anterior to the precentral sulci, the cortical surface area in PLS was {small tilde}85% of that of the controswith correspondingly reduced white matter. In ALS the cortical surface areas of the anterior frontal lobes did not differ from those of the controls, but the amount of underlying white matter was reduced almost as much in ALS as it was in PLS. The measured changes in the frontal lobes suggest that in PLS there is simultaneous atrophy of the primary, premotor and supplementary motor areas of the cortex, with consequent degeneration of corticospinal and corticoreticular axons descending through the underlying white matter. These changes could account for the progressive upper motor neuron syndrome. In ALS, with no significant frontal cortical atrophy, the shrinkage of the white matter may be due to degeneration of axons projecting to the frontal cortex from elsewhere. Deprivation ofafferents could explain the diminution of motor functions of the frontal lobes in ALS and also the changes in word fluency, judgement and attention that can be detected by appropriate testing in some patients with the disease. Incidental observations include slightly larger parietal lobes but no difference in the frontal lobes in men as compared with women. There was also a small but significant decrease in size of the normal frontal lobes with age. The latter change was much smaller than the atrophy seen in patients with ALS and PLS.

motor neuron disease; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; primary lateral sclerosis; frontal lobes; MRI

Received December 15, 1993. Revised February 23, 1994. Accepted March 2, 1994.


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