Abstract

The short- and long-term impact of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an increasingly vital concern for both military and civilian personnel. Such injuries produce significant social and financial burdens and necessitate improved diagnostic and treatment methods. Recent integration of neuroimaging and biomechanical studies in youth collision-sport athletes has revealed that significant alterations in brain structure and function occur even in the absence of traditional clinical markers of “concussion.” While task performance is maintained, athletes exposed to repetitive head accelerations exhibit structural changes to the underlying white matter, altered glial cell metabolism, aberrant vascular response, and marked changes in functional network behavior. Moreover, these changes accumulate with accrued years of exposure, suggesting a cumulative trauma mechanism that may culminate in categorization as “concussion” and long-term neurological deficits. The goal of this review is to elucidate the role of medical imaging in recharacterizing TBI, as a whole, to better identify at-risk individuals and improve the development of preventative and interventional approaches.

Highlights

  • On Friday, October 20, 2006, Cody Lehe, a senior at Frontier High School in Indiana, participated in a high school football game, much as he had each autumn since he was a Freshman

  • – and consistent with the underlying justification for using structural health monitoring (SHM) as the model for the study – data collected in the Purdue Neurotrauma Group (PNG) study demonstrate that collision-sport athletes do, accrue injury over the course of the season

  • Even when a concussion has been identified, meaningful assessment of the prognosis remains elusive. Current studies such as the $35 million National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)–DOD CARE Consortium and the $60 million GE–NFL Head Health Initiative are focused on assessing the outcomes of concussion based on biomarkers, in large part to be obtained from Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

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Summary

Introduction

On Friday, October 20, 2006, Cody Lehe, a senior at Frontier High School in Indiana, participated in a high school football game, much as he had each autumn since he was a Freshman. Cody was promptly taken to the local hospital and treated according to the standard-of-care for possible concussion symptoms – he underwent a computed tomography (CT) exam to determine if he had experienced a fractured skull or had a subdural hematoma. For both potentially serious outcomes, the CT exam was negative.

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