Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury

A barrier in the diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) stems from the lack of measures that are adequately sensitive in detecting mild head injuries. MRI and CT are typically negative in mTBI patients with persistent symptoms of post-concussive syndrome (PCS), and characteristic difficulti...

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Main Authors: Mithun Diwakar, Deborah L. Harrington, Jun Maruta, Jamshid Ghajar, Fady El-Gabalawy, Laura Muzzatti, Maurizio Corbetta, Ming-Xiong Huang, Roland R. Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-01-01
Series:NeuroImage: Clinical
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213158215000789
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spelling doaj-3e725ea53f47428ea508a4aa509abd4f2020-11-24T22:22:17ZengElsevierNeuroImage: Clinical2213-15822015-01-018C21022310.1016/j.nicl.2015.04.011Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injuryMithun Diwakar0Deborah L. Harrington1Jun Maruta2Jamshid Ghajar3Fady El-Gabalawy4Laura Muzzatti5Maurizio Corbetta6Ming-Xiong Huang7Roland R. Lee8Department of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USADepartment of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USABrain Trauma Foundation, New York, NY, USABrain Trauma Foundation, New York, NY, USADepartment of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USADepartment of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USADepartment of Neurology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO, USADepartment of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USADepartment of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USAA barrier in the diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) stems from the lack of measures that are adequately sensitive in detecting mild head injuries. MRI and CT are typically negative in mTBI patients with persistent symptoms of post-concussive syndrome (PCS), and characteristic difficulties in sustaining attention often go undetected on neuropsychological testing, which can be insensitive to momentary lapses in concentration. Conversely, visual tracking strongly depends on sustained attention over time and is impaired in chronic mTBI patients, especially when tracking an occluded target. This finding suggests deficient internal anticipatory control in mTBI, the neural underpinnings of which are poorly understood. The present study investigated the neuronal bases for deficient anticipatory control during visual tracking in 25 chronic mTBI patients with persistent PCS symptoms and 25 healthy control subjects. The task was performed while undergoing magnetoencephalography (MEG), which allowed us to examine whether neural dysfunction associated with anticipatory control deficits was due to altered alpha, beta, and/or gamma activity. Neuropsychological examinations characterized cognition in both groups. During MEG recordings, subjects tracked a predictably moving target that was either continuously visible or randomly occluded (gap condition). MEG source-imaging analyses tested for group differences in alpha, beta, and gamma frequency bands. The results showed executive functioning, information processing speed, and verbal memory deficits in the mTBI group. Visual tracking was impaired in the mTBI group only in the gap condition. Patients showed greater error than controls before and during target occlusion, and were slower to resynchronize with the target when it reappeared. Impaired tracking concurred with abnormal beta activity, which was suppressed in the parietal cortex, especially the right hemisphere, and enhanced in left caudate and frontal–temporal areas. Regional beta-amplitude demonstrated high classification accuracy (92%) compared to eye-tracking (65%) and neuropsychological variables (80%). These findings show that deficient internal anticipatory control in mTBI is associated with altered beta activity, which is remarkably sensitive given the heterogeneity of injuries.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213158215000789Mild traumatic brain injuryVisual trackingAnticipatory controlAttentionMagnetoencephalography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mithun Diwakar
Deborah L. Harrington
Jun Maruta
Jamshid Ghajar
Fady El-Gabalawy
Laura Muzzatti
Maurizio Corbetta
Ming-Xiong Huang
Roland R. Lee
spellingShingle Mithun Diwakar
Deborah L. Harrington
Jun Maruta
Jamshid Ghajar
Fady El-Gabalawy
Laura Muzzatti
Maurizio Corbetta
Ming-Xiong Huang
Roland R. Lee
Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury
NeuroImage: Clinical
Mild traumatic brain injury
Visual tracking
Anticipatory control
Attention
Magnetoencephalography
author_facet Mithun Diwakar
Deborah L. Harrington
Jun Maruta
Jamshid Ghajar
Fady El-Gabalawy
Laura Muzzatti
Maurizio Corbetta
Ming-Xiong Huang
Roland R. Lee
author_sort Mithun Diwakar
title Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury
title_short Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury
title_full Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury
title_fullStr Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury
title_full_unstemmed Filling in the gaps: Anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury
title_sort filling in the gaps: anticipatory control of eye movements in chronic mild traumatic brain injury
publisher Elsevier
series NeuroImage: Clinical
issn 2213-1582
publishDate 2015-01-01
description A barrier in the diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) stems from the lack of measures that are adequately sensitive in detecting mild head injuries. MRI and CT are typically negative in mTBI patients with persistent symptoms of post-concussive syndrome (PCS), and characteristic difficulties in sustaining attention often go undetected on neuropsychological testing, which can be insensitive to momentary lapses in concentration. Conversely, visual tracking strongly depends on sustained attention over time and is impaired in chronic mTBI patients, especially when tracking an occluded target. This finding suggests deficient internal anticipatory control in mTBI, the neural underpinnings of which are poorly understood. The present study investigated the neuronal bases for deficient anticipatory control during visual tracking in 25 chronic mTBI patients with persistent PCS symptoms and 25 healthy control subjects. The task was performed while undergoing magnetoencephalography (MEG), which allowed us to examine whether neural dysfunction associated with anticipatory control deficits was due to altered alpha, beta, and/or gamma activity. Neuropsychological examinations characterized cognition in both groups. During MEG recordings, subjects tracked a predictably moving target that was either continuously visible or randomly occluded (gap condition). MEG source-imaging analyses tested for group differences in alpha, beta, and gamma frequency bands. The results showed executive functioning, information processing speed, and verbal memory deficits in the mTBI group. Visual tracking was impaired in the mTBI group only in the gap condition. Patients showed greater error than controls before and during target occlusion, and were slower to resynchronize with the target when it reappeared. Impaired tracking concurred with abnormal beta activity, which was suppressed in the parietal cortex, especially the right hemisphere, and enhanced in left caudate and frontal–temporal areas. Regional beta-amplitude demonstrated high classification accuracy (92%) compared to eye-tracking (65%) and neuropsychological variables (80%). These findings show that deficient internal anticipatory control in mTBI is associated with altered beta activity, which is remarkably sensitive given the heterogeneity of injuries.
topic Mild traumatic brain injury
Visual tracking
Anticipatory control
Attention
Magnetoencephalography
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213158215000789
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