Elsevier

NeuroImage: Clinical

Volume 7, 2015, Pages 493-505
NeuroImage: Clinical

White matter disruption in moderate/severe pediatric traumatic brain injury: Advanced tract-based analyses

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2015.02.002Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • We examined pediatric traumatic brain injury patients at 2 time points post injury.

  • Cross sectional analyses were completed at the post-acute and chronic stages.

  • We used novel tract-based methods to reveal widespread white matter disruption.

  • White matter disruption chronically was related to cognitive deficits.

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of death and disability in children and can lead to a wide range of impairments. Brain imaging methods such as DTI (diffusion tensor imaging) are uniquely sensitive to the white matter (WM) damage that is common in TBI. However, higher-level analyses using tractography are complicated by the damage and decreased FA (fractional anisotropy) characteristic of TBI, which can result in premature tract endings. We used the newly developed autoMATE (automated multi-atlas tract extraction) method to identify differences in WM integrity. 63 pediatric patients aged 8–19 years with moderate/severe TBI were examined with cross sectional scanning at one or two time points after injury: a post-acute assessment 1–5 months post-injury and a chronic assessment 13–19 months post-injury. A battery of cognitive function tests was performed in the same time periods. 56 children were examined in the first phase, 28 TBI patients and 28 healthy controls. In the second phase 34 children were studied, 17 TBI patients and 17 controls (27 participants completed both post-acute and chronic phases). We did not find any significant group differences in the post-acute phase. Chronically, we found extensive group differences, mainly for mean and radial diffusivity (MD and RD). In the chronic phase, we found higher MD and RD across a wide range of WM. Additionally, we found correlations between these WM integrity measures and cognitive deficits. This suggests a distributed pattern of WM disruption that continues over the first year following a TBI in children.

Keywords

Diffusion tensor imaging
Traumatic brain injury
Longitudinal
Pediatric
Tractography

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