Research Article
No access
Published Online: 24 September 2007

Diffusion Tensor Imaging Detects Clinically Important Axonal Damage after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A Pilot Study

Publication: Journal of Neurotrauma
Volume 24, Issue Number 9

Abstract

The goal of the current investigation was to detect clinically important axonal damage in cerebral white matter after mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). To this end, we evaluated a prospective, pilot study of six subjects with isolated mild TBI and six matched orthopedic controls. All subjects underwent DTI scanning, post-concussive symptom (PCS) assessment, and neurobehavioral testing within 72 h of injury. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and trace values in white matter voxels of whole brain and five preslected regions of interest (ROI) were compared in mild TBI and control subjects using a quantile approach. In addition, whole brain images were analyzed using voxel-based morphometry. All subjects underwent quality of life and repeat PCS assessment at 1 month. Whole brain images revealed significantly lower 1st percentile trace values (mean 0.465 vs. 0.488, p = 0.049) among mild TBI subjects. These trace values correlated with PCS scores at both 72 h (r = −0.57, p = 0.05) and 1 month (r = −0.61, p = 0.04). Analysis of ROIs showed mild TBI subjects to have significantly lower mean trace in the left anterior internal capsule (0.536 vs. 0.574, p = 0.007) and higher maximum ROI-specific median FA values (mean 0.801 vs. 0.756, p = 0.035) in the posterior corpus callosum. These FA values correlated with 72-h PCS score (r = −0.63, p = 0.03), and two neurobehavioral tests (visual motor speed [r = 0.63, p = 0.03] and impulse control [r = 0.59, p = 0.04]). Collectively, DTI detected significantly lower trace and elevated FA values in mild TBI subjects compared to controls. These abnormalities correlated to poor clinical outcome. We believe these findings represent axonal swelling, an early step in the process of axonal injury.

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

cover image Journal of Neurotrauma
Journal of Neurotrauma
Volume 24Issue Number 9September 2007
Pages: 1447 - 1459
PubMed: 17892407

History

Published online: 24 September 2007
Published in print: September 2007

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Topics

Authors

Affiliations

Jeffrey J. Bazarian
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Department of Neurology, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Jianhui Zhong
Department of Radiology, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Department of Physics, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Brian Blyth
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Tong Zhu
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Voyko Kavcic
Department of Neurology, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Derick Peterson
Department of Biostatistics, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Department of Computational Biology, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Export citation

Select the format you want to export the citations of this publication.

View Options

Get Access

Access content

To read the fulltext, please use one of the options below to sign in or purchase access.

Society Access

If you are a member of a society that has access to this content please log in via your society website and then return to this publication.

Restore your content access

Enter your email address to restore your content access:

Note: This functionality works only for purchases done as a guest. If you already have an account, log in to access the content to which you are entitled.

View options

PDF/EPUB

View PDF/ePub

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share on social media

Back to Top