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. 2019 Oct 1;36(19):2785-2802.
doi: 10.1089/neu.2018.5978. Epub 2019 Jun 7.

Longitudinal Analysis of Corpus Callosum Diffusion Tensor Imaging Metrics and Its Association with Neurological Outcome

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Longitudinal Analysis of Corpus Callosum Diffusion Tensor Imaging Metrics and Its Association with Neurological Outcome

Ana M Castaño-Leon et al. J Neurotrauma. .

Abstract

Traumatic axonal injury (TAI) is the main cause of cognitive and psychological disfunction after a traumatic brain injury (TBI). Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is considered a useful technique for indirect assessment of white matter (WM) integrity after a TBI. Scattered WM alterations and its relationship with patient severity have been discovered in normal appearing conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies based on DTI sequences. However, there is a lack of large sample studies on the longitudinal changes of DTI metrics to be used to determine the temporal profile after head injury and its association with patient outcome. We performed a prospective observational study in 118 moderate-to-severe TBI patients. The study included clinical outcome assessment based on the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE) and serial DTI studies in the early subacute setting (< 60 days) and 6 and 12 months after injury. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and axial and radial diffusivities (AD and RD, respectively) were measured in the three portions of corpus callosum (genu, body, splenium) at each time-point and compared with normalized values from an age-matched control group. Longitudinal FA analysis and its correlation with patient improvement also was done by non-parametric testing and ordinal regression analysis. Our main results indicated that between all the time-points, dynamic changes in DTI metrics in all three portions of corpus callosum were detected, but TBI patients continued to show significantly lower FA and AD values and higher RD values compared with controls. We also have discovered differences in the change of DTI metrics among different time-points in patient subgroups according with their outcome improvement. In conclusion, even without normalization of DTI metrics in the long-term, knowledge of the temporal profile of change in DTI metrics can provide important information about patients' clinical recovery after TBI.

Keywords: axial diffusivity; diffusion tensor imaging; fractional anisotropy; longitudinal analysis; ordinal regression analysis; outcome measures; radial diffusivity; traumatic brain injury.

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