Introduction
Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies on Wilson’s disease (WD) show lack of correlations between neurological and
neuroimaging features. Long-term follow-up reports with sequential brain MRI in patients with neurological WD comparing different
modalities of treatment are scarce.
Methods
Eighteen patients with neurological WD underwent pretreatment and posttreatment brain MRI scans to evaluate the range of abnormalities
and the evolution along these different periods. All patients underwent at least two MRI scans at different intervals, up
to 11 years after the beginning of treatment. MRI findings were correlated with clinical picture, clinical severity, duration
of neurological symptoms, and treatment with two different drugs. Patients were divided into two groups according to treatment:
d-penicillamine (D-P), zinc (Zn), and Zn after the onset of severe intolerance to D-P.
Results
MRI scans before treatment showed, in all patients, hypersignal intensity lesions on T2- and proton-density-weighted images
bilaterally and symmetrically at basal nuclei, thalamus, brain stem, cerebellum, brain cortex, and brain white matter. The
most common neurological symptoms were: dysarthria, parkinsonism, dystonia, tremor, psychiatric disturbances, dysphagia, risus
sardonicus, ataxia, chorea, and athetosis.
Conclusions
From the neurological point of view, there was no difference on the evolution between the group treated exclusively with D-P
and the one treated with Zn. Analysis of MRI scans with longer intervals after the beginning of treatment depicted a trend
for neuroimaging worsening, without neurological correspondence, among patients treated with Zn. Neuroimaging pattern of evolution
was more favorable for the group that received exclusively D-P.
Keywords Wilson’s disease - Neuroimaging - Treatment - Zinc -
d-penicillamine