Network Localization of Fatigue in Multiple Sclerosis




Likitalo, Olli; Kungshamn, Jaakko; Bellmunt‐Gil, Albert; Tommasin, Silvia; Ojha, Abhineet; Viitala, Matias; Aaltonen, Juho; Lötjönen, Jyrki; Koikkalainen, Juha; Ylikotila, Pauli; Pantano, Patrizia; Soilu‐Hänninen, Merja; Joutsa, Juho

PublisherWiley

2025

 Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology

acn3.70241

2328-9503

2328-9503

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1002/acn3.70241

https://doi.org/10.1002/acn3.70241

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/505431461



Background

Fatigue is among the most common symptoms and one of the main factors determining the quality of life in multiple sclerosis (MS). However, the neurobiological mechanisms underlying fatigue are not fully understood. Here we studied lesion locations and their connections in individuals with MS, aiming to identify brain networks associated with fatigue.

Methods

38 MS patients with and 21 without fatigue were included in the study. Association between fatigue and lesion locations was investigated using voxel-lesion symptom mapping and lesion connectivity using lesion network mapping. The findings were tested in two independent datasets, including (1) MS patients scanned using resting-state functional connectivity MRI (rs-fcMRI) (n = 199) and (2) individuals with stroke lesions (n = 85).

Results

There were no specific anatomical MS lesion locations significantly associated with fatigue, but lesions associated with fatigue were connected to a common network with peak positive connectivity to the right premotor cortex and negative connectivity to the left temporal pole (pFWE < 0.05). Of the two identified network nodes, connectivity from the premotor cortex to multiple other brain regions was significantly associated with MS fatigue severity in the independent dataset of MS patients (p < 0.05). The MS fatigue network was also reproducible in poststroke fatigue (spatial correlation r = 0.57, permutation test p = 0.02), again showing that lesion connectivity to the premotor cortex, but not the temporal pole, was associated with fatigue (p = 0.04).

Conclusions

Our results show that fatigue in MS localizes to a brain network, lending insight into the neural substrates of fatigue.


This study was funded by the Finnish Medical Foundation, Finnish Foundation for Alcohol Studies, Turku University Foundation, Turku UniversityHospital (VTR funds), Instrumentarium Science Foundation and partially supported by FISM—Fondazione Italiana Sclerosi Multipla (cod 2022/R-Multi/028


Last updated on 23/12/2025 10:09:21 AM