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Manual sleep scoring for research purposes and for the diagnosis of sleep disorders is labor-intensive and often varies significantly between scorers, which has motivated many attempts to design automatic sleep stage classifiers. With the recent introduction of large, publicly available hand-scored polysomnographic data, and concomitant advances in machine learning methods to solve complex classification problems with supervised learning, the problem has received new attention, and a number of new classifiers that provide excellent accuracy. Most of these however have non-trivial barriers to use. We introduce the Greifswald Sleep Stage Classifier (GSSC), which is free, open source, and can be relatively easily installed and used on any moderately powered computer. In addition, the GSSC has been trained to perform well on a large variety of electrode set-ups, allowing high performance sleep staging with portable systems. The GSSC can also be readily integrated into brain-computer interfaces for real-time inference. These innovations were achieved while simultaneously reaching a level of accuracy equal to, or exceeding, recent state of the art classifiers and human experts, making the GSSC an excellent choice for researchers in need of reliable, automatic sleep staging.
Deteriorations in slow wave sleep (SWS) have been linked to brain aging and Alzheimer’s disease (AD), possibly due to its key role in clearance of amyloid-beta and tau (Aß/tau), two pathogenic hallmarks of AD. Spermidine administration has been shown to improve sleep quality in animal models. So far, the association between spermidine levels in humans and parameters of SWS physiology are unknown but may be valuable for therapeutic strategies. Data from 216 participants (age range 50–81 years) of the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania TREND were included in our analysis. We investigated associations between spermidine plasma levels, key parameters of sleep macroarchitecture and microarchitecture that were previously associated with AD pathology, and brain health measured via a marker of structural brain atrophy (AD score). Higher spermidine levels were significantly associated with lower coupling between slow oscillations and spindle activity. No association was evident for SWS, slow oscillatory, and spindle activity throughout non-rapid eye movement sleep. Furthermore, elevated spermidine blood levels were significantly associated with a higher AD score, while sleep markers revealed no association with AD score. The association between higher spermidine levels and brain health was not mediated by coupling between slow oscillations and spindle activity. We report that higher spermidine blood levels are associated not only with deteriorated brain health but also with less advantageous markers of sleep quality in older adults. Future studies need to evaluate whether sleep, spermidine, and Aß/tau deposition are interrelated and whether sleep may play a mediating role.
Stigmatisierung tritt bei psychischen, körperlichen sowie chronisch neurologischen Erkrankungen auf. Stigma kann vielfältige Auswirkungen auf Betroffene haben: Es vergrößert Gesundheitsunterschiede, verringert Lebensqualität und schafft Hürden, Gesundheitsleistungen zu nutzen. Internationale Studien zu diesem Thema zeig-ten, dass Stigma bei MS-Patient*innen u.a. die Lebensqualität, das psychische Wohlbefinden, das Offenlegen der Erkrankung und die Einhaltung von Therapien beeinflusst. Hinsichtlich der Stigmatisierung bei chronisch neurologischen Erkran-kungen, wie Multipler Sklerose (MS), gibt es in Deutschland bisher keine Studien. Ziel dieser Arbeit war eine erstmalige Datenerhebung zu Stigmatisierung bei MS. Endpunkte der Erhebung sind, welche Formen von Stigma in dieser Kohorte vorlie-gen und ob es psychische Komponenten, krankheitsspezifische Eigenschaften o-der soziodemographische Daten gibt, die im Zusammenhang mit Stigma stehen. Diese Daten wurden daraufhin in Vergleich zu internationalen Daten gestellt. Auch bisher noch kaum erforschte Assoziationen zu Stigma und Fatigue wurden näher betrachtet.
Die Studie wurde als prospektive Kohortenstudie in Form validierter Fragebögen an der Universität Greifswald (Klinik für Psychiatrie und Klinik für Neurologie) durchge-führt. Zur Auswertung unserer Daten wurden zunächst Basistabellen mit Angaben aus Mittelwert, Standardabweichung, Median und Interquartilenabstand verwendet. Um einen monotonen Zusammenhang zwischen den Variablen zu untersuchen, wurde der Rangkorrelationskoeffizient nach Spearman angewandt; um Assoziatio-nen aufzuzeigen die negative binomiale Regression.
Die Zusammensetzung der Kohorte mit dem Anteil an Männern (26%) und Frauen (74%) ist repräsentativ für MS. Alter und Erkrankungsdauer sind heterogen verteilt. 88 Personen hatten den schubförmig remittierenden MS-Typ, 11 den sekundär pro-gredienten und ein Patient den primär progredienten Verlaufstyp. Der Stigmatisie-rungsgrad in dieser MS-Kohorte ist gering. Der Modalwert für beide Stigma-Skalen liegt jeweils beim Minimum. Stigmatisierung korreliert signifikant auf hohem zweisei-tigen Signifikanzniveau (p>0,05) mit Depression (Korrelationskoeffizient 0,55), Fati-gue (0,51) und Behinderung (0,34). Für Lebensqualität liegt eine negative Korrelati-on vor (-0,54). Bei hohem Signifikanzniveau (p=0,001) erhöhen Behinderung und Depression das Risiko für MS-bezogene Stigmatisierung im Vergleich zu einer ge-sunden Referenzgruppe: Behinderung erhöht es jährlich um 38% und Depression um 5%. Mit jedem weiteren Lebensjahr der Patient*innen sinkt das Stigma-Risiko um 2,7 %. Bei Menschen mit Fatigue steigt das Risiko stigmatisiert zu werden jähr-lich um 2%.
Durch die vorliegende Arbeit konnten Ergebnisse internationaler Studien hinsicht-lich der Zusammenhänge zwischen Depression und Behinderung zu Stigma bestä-tigt werden. Ebenfalls konnte bestätigt werden, dass der Stigmatisierungsgrad bei MS eher gering ist. Der Grad der Behinderung beeinflusst das Stigmatisierungser-leben am stärksten, was sich häufiger in Form von internalisiertem statt öffentlichem Stigma äußert. Dass Jüngere eher betroffen sind, kann mit dem Vorkommen von erwartetem Stigma bei Unvorhersagbarkeit der Diagnose erklärt werden. Das erwar-tete Stigma kann schließlich besonders bei jüngeren Patient*innen zur Verheimli-chung der Erkrankung führen. Dies wurde im Prozess dieser Arbeit herausgearbei-tet und sollte in weiteren Studien noch eingehender untersucht werden. Da im Alter Stigmatisierung vorliegt und Behinderung ebenso wie behinderungsbezogenes Stigma mit dem Alter zunehmen, liegt die Vermutung nahe, dass im Alter andere Formen von Stigma eine Rolle spielen.
Bei spezifischen klinischen Konstellationen ist eine Lumbalpunktion zur Liquoranalytik
wichtig, um die Ätiologie der epileptischen Anfälle bzw. eines Status epilepticus zu klären und
alternative Erkrankungen auszuschließen. Die im Rahmen der vorliegenden Studie entwickelte
IDEAL-Checkliste stellt vor diesem Hintergrund einen einfach umzusetzenden und in den
klinischen Alltag leicht zu implementierenden Algorithmus dar, der behandelnde Ärztinnen
und Ärzte bei der Entscheidung für oder gegen die Durchführung einer Liquoruntersuchung
unterstützt. Gleichzeitig bewahrt die Anwendung der Checkliste Patientinnen und Patienten vor
einer nicht notwendigen Liquorpunktion mit entsprechenden Risiken. In den hier vorliegenden
Studien hätte bei etwa der Hälfte der Fälle (43 % in der prospektiven bzw. 49 % in der
retrospektiven Kohorte) auf eine Lumbalpunktion verzichtet werden können. Damit hätten die
periprozedurale Belastung der Patientinnen und Patienten sowie potentielle Komplikationen
einer Lumbalpunktion vermieden werden können.
Gleichzeitig besteht aufgrund des hohen negativen prädiktiven Wertes von 99-100 % eine hohe
Wahrscheinlichkeit eine liquorrelevante Ätiologie auch nicht zu übersehen, wenn kein Item der
kombinierten IDEAL-Checkliste zutrifft und damit auf eine Lumbalpunktion zur Liquoranalyse
verzichtet wird.
Eine multizentrische, prospektive Beobachtungsstudie sollte unter Anwendung der nationalen
und demographischen MoCA-Werte und auch im Hinblick auf unterschiedliche
Diagnostikstrategien bzw. Indikationskriterien, die breite klinische Anwendung, aber auch die
Erfassung seltener Ätiologien (z. B. immunsupprimierte Patientinnen und Patienten,
systemische Autoimmunerkrankungen) zur weiteren Validierung der IDEAL-Checkliste
erfolgen.
Background:
Epileptic seizures can occur throughout the course of multiple sclerosis (MS) and are associated with increasing disability progression over time. However, there are no data on whether epileptic seizures at the onset of MS also lead to increasing disability.
Objective:
To examine disease progression over time for MS patients with epileptic seizures at onset.
Methods:
We analyzed the data of 30,713 patients on the German Multiple Sclerosis Register in a case–control study for more than 15 years. MS patients with seizures at onset were further divided into subgroups with polysymptomatic and monosymptomatic onset to assess the impact of additional symptoms on disease progression.
Results:
A total of 46 patients had seizures as onset symptoms. Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) within the first year was lower in the group with seizures at onset compared to controls (0.75 versus 1.6, p < 0.05), which changed until the last reported visit (3.11 versus 3.0). Both subgroups revealed increased EDSS progression over time compared to controls.
Conclusion:
Epileptic seizures at MS onset are associated with a higher amount of disability progression over time. Additional longitudinal data are needed to further clarify the impact of seizures on the pathophysiology of MS disease progression.
Background
Neuroinflammation and maladaptive neuroplasticity play pivotal roles in migraine (MIG), trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (TAC), and complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS). Notably, CRPS shares connections with calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in its pathophysiology. This study aims to assess if the documented links between CRPS and MIG/TAC in literature align with clinical phenotypes and disease progressions. This assessment may bolster the hypothesis of shared pathophysiological mechanisms.
Methods
Patients with CRPS (n = 184) and an age-/gender-matched control group with trauma but without CRPS (n = 148) participated in this case–control study. Participant answered well-established questionnaires for the definition of CRPS symptoms, any headache complaints, headache entity, and clinical management.
Results
Patients with CRPS were significantly more likely to suffer from migraine (OR: 3.23, 95% CI 1.82–5.85), TAC (OR: 8.07, 95% CI 1.33–154.79), or non-classified headaches (OR: 3.68, 95% CI 1.88–7.49) compared to the control group. Patients with MIG/TAC developed CRPS earlier in life (37.2 ± 11.1 vs 46.8 ± 13.5 years), had more often a central CRPS phenotype (60.6% vs. 37.0% overall) and were three times more likely to report allodynia compared to CRPS patients with other types of headaches. Additionally, these patients experienced higher pain levels and more severe CRPS, which intensified with an increasing number of headache days. Patients receiving monoclonal antibody treatment targeting the CGRP pathway for headaches reported positive effects on CRPS symptoms.
Conclusion
This study identified clinically relevant associations of MIG/TAC and CRPS not explained by chance. Further longitudinal investigations exploring potentially mutual pathomechanisms may improve the clinical management of both CRPS and primary headache disorders.
Trial registration
German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00022961).
The combination of repeated behavioral training with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) holds promise to exert beneficial effects on brain function beyond the trained task. However, little is known about the underlying mechanisms. We performed a monocenter, single-blind randomized, placebo-controlled trial comparing cognitive training to concurrent anodal tDCS (target intervention) with cognitive training to concurrent sham tDCS (control intervention), registered at ClinicalTrial.gov (Identifier NCT03838211). The primary outcome (performance in trained task) and secondary behavioral outcomes (performance on transfer tasks) were reported elsewhere. Here, underlying mechanisms were addressed by pre-specified analyses of multimodal magnetic resonance imaging before and after a three-week executive function training with prefrontal anodal tDCS in 48 older adults. Results demonstrate that training combined with active tDCS modulated prefrontal white matter microstructure which predicted individual transfer task performance gain. Training-plus-tDCS also resulted in microstructural grey matter alterations at the stimulation site, and increased prefrontal functional connectivity. We provide insight into the mechanisms underlying neuromodulatory interventions, suggesting tDCS-induced changes in fiber organization and myelin formation, glia-related and synaptic processes in the target region, and synchronization within targeted functional networks. These findings advance the mechanistic understanding of neural tDCS effects, thereby contributing to more targeted neural network modulation in future experimental and translation tDCS applications.
Polypharmacy in patients with multiple sclerosis and the impact on levels of care and therapy units
(2023)
Background: The aim of this study was to examine the societal costs of polypharmacy in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). We therefore focused on the association between the number of medications on the level of care (LOC), the German classification of the need for care, and the number of therapy sessions (TTU).
Methods: In addition to demographic information and medication, 101 MS patients performed the Multiple Sclerosis Health Resource Utilization Survey (MS-HRS). Medications were subdivided into a total number of medications (TD), MS-related medication [MSD, i.e., disease-modifying drugs (DMDs) and symptomatic treatment (SD)], and medication for comorbidities (CDs). Multivariate linear regression models were performed to estimate if the amount of each medication type affects LOC or TTU.
Results: Polypharmacy appeared in 54 patients at the time of the survey. The relative risk (RR) of LOC 1 increased significantly by 2.46 (p = 0.001) per TD and by 2.55 (p = 0.004) per MSD, but not per CD (RR 1.44; p = 0.092). The effect of RR on MSD was driven by SD (RR 2.2; p = 0.013) but not DMD (RR 2.6; p = 0.4). RR of MSD remained significant for LOC 2 (1.77; p = 0.009) and LOC 3/4 (1.91; p = 0.015), with a strong trend in RR of SD, but not DMD. TTU increased significantly per MSD (p = 0.012), but not per TD (p = 0.081) and CD (p = 0.724).
Conclusion: The number of MSDs is related to the likelihood of a higher level of care and the number of therapy sessions and is therefore a good indication of the extent of the societal costs.
Objective: The study aimed to test the reliability of a semi-structured telephone interview for the classification of headache disorders according to the ICHD-3.
Background: Questionnaire-based screening tools are often optimized for single primary headache diagnoses [e.g., migraine (MIG) and tension headache (TTH)] and therefore insufficiently represent the diagnostic precision of the ICHD-3, which limits epidemiological research of rare headache disorders. Brief semi-structured telephone interviews could be an effective alternative to improve classification.
Methods: A patient population representative of different primary and secondary headache disorders (n = 60) was recruited from the outpatient clinic (HSA) of a tertiary care headache center. These patients completed an established population-based questionnaire for the classification of MIG, TTH, or trigeminal autonomic cephalalgia (TAC). In addition, they received a semi-structured telephone interview call from three blinded headache specialists individually. The agreement of diagnoses made either using the questionnaires or interviews with the HSA diagnoses was evaluated.
Results: Of the 59 patients (n = 1 dropout), 24% had a second-order and 5% had a third-order headache disorder. The main diagnoses were as follows: frequent primary headaches with 61% MIG, 10% TAC, 9% TTH, and 5% rare primary and 16% secondary headaches. Second-order diagnosis was chronic migraine throughout, and third-order diagnoses were medication overuse headache and TTH. Agreement between main headaches from the HSA was significantly better for the telephone interview than for the questionnaire (questionnaire: κ = 0.330; interview: κ = 0.822; p < 0.001). Second-order diagnoses were not adequately captured by questionnaires, while there was a trend for good agreement with the telephone interview (κ = 0.433; p = 0.074). Headache frequency and psychiatric comorbidities were independent predictors of HSA and telephone interview agreement. Male sex, headache frequency, severity, and depressive disorders were independently predictive for agreement between the questionnaire and HSA. The telephone interview showed high sensitivity (≥71%) and specificity (≥92%) for all primary headache disorders, whereas the questionnaire was below 50% in either sensitivity or specificity.
Conclusion: The semi-structured telephone interview appears to be a more reliable tool for accurate diagnosis of headache disorders than self-report questionnaires. This offers the potential to improve epidemiological headache research and care even in underserved areas.
Der Blepharospasmus ist eine Erkrankung, bei der es zu häufig wiederkehrenden Kontraktionen der Lidmuskulatur beider Augen kommt und gehört zu den fokalen Dystonien. Die Pathophysiologie dieser Bewegungsstörung ist noch nicht vollständig geklärt. Die Ursachenforschung und damit ein besseres Verständnis des Blepharospasmus ist wichtig, da der Blepharospasmus für die Patienten sehr behindernd sein kann. Die bisherigen Therapien des Blepharospasmus sind sicher, aber aktuell lediglich symptomorientiert. Auch deshalb sind Untersuchungen zur Pathophysiologie des Blepharospasmus sinnvoll. Derzeitige Vorstellungen zur Pathophysiologie des Blepharospasmus legen nahe, dass Veränderungen in einem Netzwerk vorliegen, welches aus den Basalganglien, dem Kleinhirn, dem Thalamus und dem sensomotorischen Kortex besteht. Zudem sind wahrscheinlich andere Strukturen wie die peripheren Schmerzrezeptoren und der visuelle Kortex beim Blepharospasmus betroffen. Während die Basalganglien, das Kleinhirn, der Thalamus und den sensomotorischen Kortex vorrangig für die Verarbeitung der sensorischen und motorischen Informationen verantwortlich sind, deuten mehrere Hinweise darauf hin, dass diese Strukturen auch bei der Verarbeitung von Informationen im Zusammenhang mit dem Riechen und dem Schmecken von Bedeutung sind. Basierend auf diesen Überschneidungen der beteiligten neuroanatomischen Strukturen stellt sich die Frage, ob Veränderungen des Riech- und Schmeckvermögens bei Patienten mit Blepharospasmus gefunden werden. Ferner wurde im Rahmen dieser Studie der Frage nachgegangen, ob die Behandlung mit Botulinumtoxin eine Auswirkung auf das Riechen und Schmecken bei Patienten mit Blepharospasmus hat.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden 19 Patienten mit einem Blepharospasmus (Alter 66.6 ± 8.7 Jahren, 14 Frauen und 5 Männer) und 15 gesunde Kontrollpersonen (Alter 65.9 ± 8.4 Jahren, 9 Frauen und 6 Männer) untersucht. Davon wurden zehn Patienten mit und ohne die Wirkung vom Botulinumtoxin untersucht und dazu passend zehn Kontrollpersonen im Abstand von vier Wochen zweimal untersucht. Die Erfassung der Riechschwelle, Geruchsidentifikation und -diskrimination fand mit den Sniffin‘ Sticks statt. Zudem wurden die Taste Strips verwendet, um den Geschmackssinn der Probanden zu bewerten. Des Weiteren wurden kognitive Funktionen und psychiatrische Veränderungen als bekannte Komorbiditäten des Blepharospasmus erfasst und mit den Ergebnissen beim Riechen und Schmecken korreliert.
Patienten mit einem Blepharospasmus hatten eine signifikant geringere Riechschwelle als die Kontrollpersonen. Ferner war der Anteil der Patienten, die eine Hyposmie aufwiesen, höher als bei den Kontrollpersonen. Die motorischen, die nicht-motorischen sowie die psychiatrischen Symptome korrelierten nicht mit den Defiziten bei der Riechschwelle. Es fand sich keine Schmeckstörungen und auch die Geruchsdiskriminierung sowie die Geruchsidentifikation waren bei den Patienten mit Blepharospasmus unauffällig. Auch fand sich kein wesentlicher Unterschied beim Riechen oder Schecken bei der Behandlung der Patienten mit Botulinumtoxin.
Die gefundenen Riechstörung sind weniger ausgeprägt als bei der zervikalen Dystonie, können aber zum besseren Verständnis der Erkrankung des Blepharospasmus beitragen. Vergleichend mit Befunden von Läsionsstudien deuten die Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass der Thalamus und das Kleinhirn eventuell in der Pathophysiologie des Blepharospasmus beteiligt sein könnten. Eine genaue Benennung der Ursachenlokalisation ist schwierig, da es sich beim Blepharospasmus wahrscheinlich um eine Netzwerkerkrankung handelt und somit verschiedene Strukturen betroffen sein können. Die Behandlung der Patienten mit Blepharospasmus mit Botulinumtoxin beeinflusst wahrscheinlich nicht das Riechen und Schmecken und ist damit auch aus dieser Sicht als eine eher sichere Behandlungsmöglichkeit anzusehen. Weitere Untersuchungen auf diesem Gebiet, zum Beispiel mittels neurophysiologischer Untersuchungsverfahren zum Riechen und Schmecken oder bildgebenden Untersuchungsverfahren, sind mit Spannung zu erwarten.
Advances in spine surgery enable technically safe interventions in older patients with disabling spine disease, yet postoperative delirium (POD) poses a serious risk for postoperative recovery. This study investigates biomarkers of pro-neuroinflammatory states that may help objectively define the pre-operative risk for POD. This study enrolled patients aged ≥60 scheduled for elective spine surgery under general anesthesia. Biomarkers for a pro-neuroinflammatory state included S100 calcium-binding protein β (S100β), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), Gasdermin D, and the soluble ectodomain of the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (sTREM2). Postoperative changes of Interleukin-6 (IL-6), Interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and C-reactive protein (CRP) were assessed as markers of systemic inflammation preoperatively, intraoperatively, and early postoperatively (up to 48 h). Patients with POD (n = 19, 75.7 ± 5.8 years) had higher pre-operative levels of sTREM2 (128.2 ± 69.4 pg/mL vs. 97.2 ± 52.0 pg/mL, p = 0.049) and Gasdermin D (2.9 ± 1.6 pg/mL vs. 2.1 ± 1.4 pg/mL, p = 0.29) than those without POD (n = 25, 75.6 ± 5.1 years). STREM2 was additionally a predictor for POD (OR = 1.01/(pg/mL) [1.00–1.03], p = 0.05), moderated by IL-6 (Wald-χ2 = 4.06, p = 0.04). Patients with POD additionally showed a significant increase in IL-6, IL-1β, and S100β levels on the first postoperative day. This study identified higher levels of sTREM2 and Gasdermin D as potential markers of a pro-neuroinflammatory state that predisposes to the development of POD. Future studies should confirm these results in a larger cohort and determine their potential as an objective biomarker to inform delirium prevention strategies.
Background: Intact socio-cognitive abilities, such as theory of mind (ToM), facial emotion recognition (FER), social decision making (SDM) and visual perspective taking (VPT), are essential for human well-being and quality of life. Impairment in social cognition can have major implications for health in affected individuals and society as a whole. Evidence for changes in social cognition in healthy and pathological aging processes, such as subjective cognitive decline (SCD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI), is currently either sparse or inconclusive. It is important to determine how social cognition changes in healthy and pathological aging and provide grounds for targeted and early assessment and intervention. The aims of this thesis were to investigate social cognition across four domains, in particular, ToM, FER, SDM and VPT, in healthy young and older individuals, as well as in individuals with cognitive deficits, such as SCD and MCI. In the case of a decline, further goals were to investigate the degree of impairment and the domains affected.
Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted in four major academic databases, MEDLINE, Web of Science Core Collection, CENTRAL, and PsycInfo, for studies investigating social cognition in healthy young and old individuals as well as individuals affected by SCD and MCI which met the inclusion criteria. The primary outcome was ToM and secondary outcomes were FER, SDM and VPT. After a systematic review was performed, studies eligible for meta-analysis were divided according to comparison groups and outcomes. Random-effects meta-analyses were conducted using standardized mean differences (SMD). Risk of Bias was assessed using the “Tool to assess risk of bias in cohort studies” modified for the present study design.
Results: After a thorough systematic literature search, 86 studies containing 88 comparisons were included in the systematic review, of which 47 were eligible for quantitative analysis. The meta-analysis revealed a progressive decline in ToM and FER abilities from young adulthood to MCI. Varying effect sizes demonstrated different trajectories of change for specific domains. Due to a lack of research, data investigating SDM and VPT, as well as SCD were insufficient for quantitative analysis.
Conclusion: ToM and FER decline gradually from healthy to pathological aging. Therefore, assessment of social cognition is important and should be incorporated in routine neurocognitive testing, so that targeted interventions can be introduced when needed. With this information in mind, future research should focus on the development of new assessment tools, as well as preventive and treatment strategies. This review also identified research gaps in certain populations (e.g. SCD, middle age, MCI-subtypes) as well as domains (VPT and SDM) that need to be addressed in the future.
The cortical silent period (CSP), assessed with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), provides insights into motor cortex excitability. Alterations in the CSP have been observed in multiple sclerosis (MS), although a comparison of the sometimes contradictory results is difficult due to methodological differences. The aim of this study is to provide a more profound neurophysiological understanding of fatigue’s pathophysiology and its relationship to the CSP. Twenty-three patients with MS, along with a matched control group, underwent comprehensive CSP measurements at four intensities (125, 150, 175, and 200% resting motor threshold), while their fatigue levels were assessed using the Fatigue Scale for Motor and Cognitive Functions (FSMC) and its motor and cognitive subscore. MS patients exhibited a significantly increased CSP duration compared to controls (p = 0.02), but CSP duration was not associated with the total FSMC, or the motor or cognitive subscore. Our data suggest a systematic difference in MS patients compared to healthy controls in the CSP but no association with fatigue when measured with the FSMC. Based on these results, and considering the heterogeneous literature in the field, our study highlights the need for a more standardized approach to neurophysiological data collection and validation. This standardization is crucial for exploring the link between TMS and clinical impairments in diseases like MS.