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Abstract #2955

Central Vein Sign and Trigeminal Lesions of Multiple Sclerosis Visualized by 7.0T MRI

Jing Jing1, Zhe Zhang1, Lei Su2, Yuan Li3, Chenyang Gao2, Ai Guo1, Xinyao Liu1, Huabing Wang1, Xinghu Zhang1, Yaou Liu1, Emmanuelle Waubant4, Fu-Dong Shi1, and Decai Tian1
1Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Beijing, China, 2Tianjin General Hospital, Tianjin, China, 3MR research collaboration team, siemens healthineers, Beijing, China, 4Department of Neurology, University of California San Fransisco, San Francisco, CA, United States

Synopsis

Keywords: Multiple Sclerosis, Multiple Sclerosis

Motivation: Multiple sclerosis patients are more vulnerable to trigeminal neuralgia, but the mechanism behind this nerve injury is still unclear.

Goal(s): We aim to investigate trigeminal nerve involvement in MS and provide insight into pathology.

Approach: 120 patients underwent 7.0 T multi-modality MRI scans. T1-MPRAGE, T2-FLAIR, FLAWS-MP2RAGE, and T2*W images were collected.

Results: Our study confirmed the high prevalence of trigeminal nerve on 7.0 T MRI and highlighted the presence of a central vein sign in trigeminal nerve lesions. This study contributes to a deeper understanding of the pathophysiology and location-specific nature of trigeminal lesions.

Impact: This finding reinforces that trigeminal nerve involvement represents a characteristic of MS lesions, which has the potential for precising diagnosis in the future.

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