Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients

Traumatic brain injury often involves focal cortical injury and white matter (WM) damage that can be measured shortly after injury. Additionally, slowly evolving WM change can be observed but there is a paucity of research on the duration and spatial pattern of long-term changes several years post...

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Main Authors: Kimberly D Farbota, Barbara B Bendlin, Andrew L Alexander, Howard A Rowley, Robert J Dempsey, Sterling C Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
DTI
TBI
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00160/full
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spelling doaj-a7fc6a9190b34f51a7117fd1cb8e5b492020-11-25T03:14:22ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612012-06-01610.3389/fnhum.2012.0016023602Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patientsKimberly D Farbota0Kimberly D Farbota1Barbara B Bendlin2Barbara B Bendlin3Andrew L Alexander4Howard A Rowley5Robert J Dempsey6Sterling C Johnson7Sterling C Johnson8William S. Middleton Memorial Veterans HospitalUniversity of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public HealthWilliam S. Middleton Memorial Veterans HospitalUniversity of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public HealthUniversity of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public HealthUniversity of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public HealthUniversity of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public HealthWilliam S. Middleton Memorial Veterans HospitalUniversity of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public HealthTraumatic brain injury often involves focal cortical injury and white matter (WM) damage that can be measured shortly after injury. Additionally, slowly evolving WM change can be observed but there is a paucity of research on the duration and spatial pattern of long-term changes several years post-injury. The current study utilized diffusion tensor imaging to identify regional WM changes in 12 TBI patients and 9 healthy controls at three time points over a four-year period. Neuropsychological testing was also administered to each participant at each time point. Results indicate that TBI patients exhibit longitudinal changes to white matter indexed by reductions in fractional anisotropy (FA) in the corpus callosum, as well as FA increases in bilateral regions of the superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) and portions of the optic radiation. FA changes appear to be driven by changes in radial (not axial) diffusivity, suggesting that observed longitudinal FA changes may be related to changes in myelin rather than to axons. Neuropsychological correlations indicate that regional FA values in the corpus callosum and sagittal stratum correlate with performance on finger tapping and visuomotor speed tasks (respectively) in TBI patients, and that longitudinal increases in FA in the sagittal stratum (SS), SLF and optic radiation (OR) correlate with improved performance on the visuomotor speed (SS) task as well as a derived measure of cognitive control (SLF, OR). The results of this study showing progressive WM deterioration for several years post-injury contribute to a growing literature supporting the hypothesis that TBI should be viewed not as an isolated incident but as a prolonged disease state. The observations of long-term neurological and functional improvement provide evidence that some ameliorative change may be occurring concurrently with progressive degeneration.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00160/fullDiffusion Tensor ImagingNeuropsychologyDTITraumatic Brain InjuryTBILongitudinal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kimberly D Farbota
Kimberly D Farbota
Barbara B Bendlin
Barbara B Bendlin
Andrew L Alexander
Howard A Rowley
Robert J Dempsey
Sterling C Johnson
Sterling C Johnson
spellingShingle Kimberly D Farbota
Kimberly D Farbota
Barbara B Bendlin
Barbara B Bendlin
Andrew L Alexander
Howard A Rowley
Robert J Dempsey
Sterling C Johnson
Sterling C Johnson
Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Neuropsychology
DTI
Traumatic Brain Injury
TBI
Longitudinal
author_facet Kimberly D Farbota
Kimberly D Farbota
Barbara B Bendlin
Barbara B Bendlin
Andrew L Alexander
Howard A Rowley
Robert J Dempsey
Sterling C Johnson
Sterling C Johnson
author_sort Kimberly D Farbota
title Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients
title_short Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients
title_full Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients
title_fullStr Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients
title_sort longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates in traumatic brain injury patients
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Traumatic brain injury often involves focal cortical injury and white matter (WM) damage that can be measured shortly after injury. Additionally, slowly evolving WM change can be observed but there is a paucity of research on the duration and spatial pattern of long-term changes several years post-injury. The current study utilized diffusion tensor imaging to identify regional WM changes in 12 TBI patients and 9 healthy controls at three time points over a four-year period. Neuropsychological testing was also administered to each participant at each time point. Results indicate that TBI patients exhibit longitudinal changes to white matter indexed by reductions in fractional anisotropy (FA) in the corpus callosum, as well as FA increases in bilateral regions of the superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) and portions of the optic radiation. FA changes appear to be driven by changes in radial (not axial) diffusivity, suggesting that observed longitudinal FA changes may be related to changes in myelin rather than to axons. Neuropsychological correlations indicate that regional FA values in the corpus callosum and sagittal stratum correlate with performance on finger tapping and visuomotor speed tasks (respectively) in TBI patients, and that longitudinal increases in FA in the sagittal stratum (SS), SLF and optic radiation (OR) correlate with improved performance on the visuomotor speed (SS) task as well as a derived measure of cognitive control (SLF, OR). The results of this study showing progressive WM deterioration for several years post-injury contribute to a growing literature supporting the hypothesis that TBI should be viewed not as an isolated incident but as a prolonged disease state. The observations of long-term neurological and functional improvement provide evidence that some ameliorative change may be occurring concurrently with progressive degeneration.
topic Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Neuropsychology
DTI
Traumatic Brain Injury
TBI
Longitudinal
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00160/full
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