Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a classic model of monophasic neuronal and axonal injury, in which tissue damage mainly occurs at the moment of trauma. There is some evidence of delayed progression of the neuronal and axonal loss. Our purpose was to test the hypothesis that quantitative MR imaging techniques can estimate the biologic changes secondary to delayed neuronal and axonal loss after TBI. Nine patients (age, 11-28 years; 5 male) who sustained a moderate or severe TBI were evaluated at a mean of 3.1 years after trauma. We applied the following techniques: bicaudate (BCR) and bifrontal (BFR) ventricle-to-brain ratios; T2 relaxometry; magnetization transfer ratio (MTR); apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC); and proton spectroscopy, by using an N-acetylaspartate/creatine (NAA/Cr) ratio measured in normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and the corpus callosum (CC). The results were compared with those of a control group. BCR and BFR mean values were significantly increased (P < or = .05) in patients due to secondary subcortical atrophy; increased T2 relaxation time was observed in the NAWM and CC, reflecting an increase in water concentration secondary to axonal loss. Increased ADC mean values and reduced MTR mean values were found in the NAWM and CC, showing damage in the myelinated axonal fibers; and decreased NAA/Cr ratio mean values were found in the CC, indicating axonal loss. These quantitative MR imaging techniques could noninvasively demonstrate the neuronal and axonal damage in the NAWM and CC of human brains, secondary to moderate or severe TBI.

Highlights

  • AND PURPOSE: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a classic model of monophasic neuronal and axonal injury, in which tissue damage mainly occurs at the moment of trauma

  • BCR and BFR mean values were significantly increased (P Յ .05) in patients due to secondary subcortical atrophy; increased T2 relaxation time was observed in the normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and corpus callosum (CC), reflecting an increase in water concentration secondary to axonal loss

  • Increased apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) mean values and reduced magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) mean values were found in the NAWM and CC, showing damage in the myelinated axonal fibers; and decreased NAA/Cr ratio mean values were found in the CC, indicating axonal loss

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that these noninvasive MR imaging quantitative techniques can identify and estimate the following biologic changes involved with neuronal and axonal loss after moderate and severe TBI: cerebral atrophy, assessed with bicaudate (BCR) and bifrontal (BFR) ventricle-to-brain ratios; extracellular-space enlargement and gliosis, assessed with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and T2 relaxometry; damage to the cytoskeleton of axonal fibers and demyelination, assessed with ADC and magnetization transfer ratio (MTR); and N-acetylaspartate (NAA) reduction, assessed with 1H-MR spectroscopy

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