Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrity

We previously identified visual tracking deficits and associated degradation of integrity in specific white matter tracts as characteristics of concussion. We re-explored these characteristics in adult patients with persistent post-concussive symptoms using independent new data acquired during 2009-...

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Main Authors: Jun eMaruta, Eva M Palacios, Robert D Zimmerman, Jamshid eGhajar, Pratik eMukherjee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00035/full
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spelling doaj-63c76cbc75ba4916a962401f42b900072020-11-25T02:02:58ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612016-02-011010.3389/fnhum.2016.00035168249Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrityJun eMaruta0Eva M Palacios1Robert D Zimmerman2Jamshid eGhajar3Jamshid eGhajar4Pratik eMukherjee5Brain Trauma FoundationUniversity of California, San Francisco, School of MedicineWeill Cornell Medical CollegeBrain Trauma FoundationStanford University School of MedicineUniversity of California, San Francisco, School of MedicineWe previously identified visual tracking deficits and associated degradation of integrity in specific white matter tracts as characteristics of concussion. We re-explored these characteristics in adult patients with persistent post-concussive symptoms using independent new data acquired during 2009-2012. Thirty-two patients and 126 normal controls underwent cognitive assessments and MR-DTI. After data collection, a subset of control subjects was selected to be individually paired with patients based on gender and age. We identified patients’ cognitive deficits through pairwise comparisons between patients and matched control subjects. Within the remaining 94 normal subjects, we identified white matter tracts whose integrity correlated with metrics that indicated performance degradation in patients. We then tested for reduced integrity in these white matter tracts in patients relative to matched controls. Most patients showed no abnormality in MR images unlike the previous study. Patients’ visual tracking was generally normal. Patients’ response times in an attention task were slowed, but could not be explained as reduced integrity of white matter tracts relating to normal response timing. In the present patient cohort, we did not observe behavioral or anatomical deficits that we previously identified as characteristic of concussion. The recent cohort likely represented those with milder injury compared to the earlier cohort. The discrepancy may be explained by a change in the patient recruitment pool circa 2007 associated with an increase in public awareness of concussion.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00035/fullDiffusion Tensor ImagingNeuroimagingNeuropsychologyPost-Concussion SyndromeEYE MOVEMENTmild traumatic brain injury
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jun eMaruta
Eva M Palacios
Robert D Zimmerman
Jamshid eGhajar
Jamshid eGhajar
Pratik eMukherjee
spellingShingle Jun eMaruta
Eva M Palacios
Robert D Zimmerman
Jamshid eGhajar
Jamshid eGhajar
Pratik eMukherjee
Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrity
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Neuroimaging
Neuropsychology
Post-Concussion Syndrome
EYE MOVEMENT
mild traumatic brain injury
author_facet Jun eMaruta
Eva M Palacios
Robert D Zimmerman
Jamshid eGhajar
Jamshid eGhajar
Pratik eMukherjee
author_sort Jun eMaruta
title Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrity
title_short Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrity
title_full Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrity
title_fullStr Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrity
title_full_unstemmed Chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. I. Relationship with white matter integrity
title_sort chronic post-concussion neurocognitive deficits. i. relationship with white matter integrity
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2016-02-01
description We previously identified visual tracking deficits and associated degradation of integrity in specific white matter tracts as characteristics of concussion. We re-explored these characteristics in adult patients with persistent post-concussive symptoms using independent new data acquired during 2009-2012. Thirty-two patients and 126 normal controls underwent cognitive assessments and MR-DTI. After data collection, a subset of control subjects was selected to be individually paired with patients based on gender and age. We identified patients’ cognitive deficits through pairwise comparisons between patients and matched control subjects. Within the remaining 94 normal subjects, we identified white matter tracts whose integrity correlated with metrics that indicated performance degradation in patients. We then tested for reduced integrity in these white matter tracts in patients relative to matched controls. Most patients showed no abnormality in MR images unlike the previous study. Patients’ visual tracking was generally normal. Patients’ response times in an attention task were slowed, but could not be explained as reduced integrity of white matter tracts relating to normal response timing. In the present patient cohort, we did not observe behavioral or anatomical deficits that we previously identified as characteristic of concussion. The recent cohort likely represented those with milder injury compared to the earlier cohort. The discrepancy may be explained by a change in the patient recruitment pool circa 2007 associated with an increase in public awareness of concussion.
topic Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Neuroimaging
Neuropsychology
Post-Concussion Syndrome
EYE MOVEMENT
mild traumatic brain injury
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00035/full
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