Monoaminergic network abnormalities are associated with fatigue in pediatric multiple sclerosis.
Background: Fatigue is commonly observed in pediatric multiple sclerosis (pedMS) patients, but its underlying mechanisms remain largely unexplored. We evaluated whether resting-state (RS) functional connectivity (FC) abnormalities in monoaminergic networks contributed to explain fatigue in pedMS.
Methods: Fifty-five pedMS and twenty-three matched healthy controls (HC) underwent clinical and RS functional MRI assessment. Patients with Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) score ≥ 4 were classified as fatigued (F). Patterns of dopamine-, noradrenaline- and serotonin-related RS FC were derived by constrained independent component analysis, using PET atlases for dopamine, noradrenaline, and serotonin transporters obtained in HCs' brain.
Results: Compared to non-fatigued (NF)-pedMS patients and HC, F-pedMS patients (15/55, 27.3%) showed decreased dopamine-related RS FC in the right postcentral gyrus. They also showed decreased dopamine-related RS FC in the left insula vs. HC and increased dopamine-related RS FC in the left middle temporal gyrus and cerebellum (lobule VI) vs. NF patients. In the noradrenaline-related network, F-pedMS patients showed decreased RS FC in the left superior parietal lobule and increased RS FC in the right thalamus vs. HC and NF-pedMS. Compared to HC, F-pedMS patients also showed decreased RS FC in the right calcarine cortex and increased RS FC in the right middle frontal gyrus. In the serotonin-related network, F-pedMS patients showed decreased RS FC in the right angular gyrus and increased RS FC in the right postcentral gyrus vs. NF-pedMS patients.
Conclusions: In pedMS, fatigue is associated with specific monoaminergic network abnormalities, providing pathological markers for this bothersome symptom and putative targets for its treatment.