Breakthrough in understanding MND

By Published On: 1 December 2021
Breakthrough in understanding MND

An “extremely valuable” breakthrough has been made in understanding motor neurone disease (MND).

A research team from Trinity College Dublin has found that MND has four distinct patterns of changes in electrical signals that can be identified using EEG (electroencephalography).

The breakthrough has been hailed as being of huge value in identifying patients for clinical trials and will assist in finding new treatments for the neurodegenerative disease.

While trials of new drugs are being undertaken, MND is known to be very heterogeneous with different patterns of disability and life expectancy. 

Predicting in advance the pattern of disability and life expectancy is one of the major challenges in designing modern clinical trials, said the team. 

The electrical signal analysis research developed within Trinity College has discovered different patterns of brain network disruption reflect the underlying disease process. 

The Trinity researchers have now shown that these patterns of brain network disruptions in MND cluster into four distinct subtypes that are predictive of how the disease progresses. 

The team’s findings move the Trinity researchers one step closer to building better and more effective treatments for different sub-categories of the disease.

The work was performed by Stefan Dukic, a PhD student within the academic unit of neurology at Trinity, under the supervision of Dr Bahman Nasseroleslami, Fr Tony Coote assistant professor in neuroelectric signal analysis.Dr Nasseroleslami said: “Understanding how brain networking is disrupted in MND has been the focus of our research for the past ten years. 

“This work show that we are on the right track, and that the technologies we have developed to capture electrical activity in the brain can identify important differences between different patient groups.”

Professor Orla Hardiman, professor of neurology and regarded as a world leader in MND research, said: “This is a very important and exciting body of work. 

“A major barrier to providing the right drug for the right patient in MND is the heterogeneity of the disease. 

“This breakthrough research has shown that it is possible to use patterns of brain network dysfunction to identify subgroups of patients that cannot be distinguished by clinical examination.

“The implications of this work are enormous, as we will have new and reliable ways segregate patients based on what is really happening within the nervous system in MND.”

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