Diagnostics (Apr 2022)

Detection of Chronic Blast-Related Mild Traumatic Brain Injury with Diffusion Tensor Imaging and Support Vector Machines

  • Deborah L. Harrington,
  • Po-Ya Hsu,
  • Rebecca J. Theilmann,
  • Annemarie Angeles-Quinto,
  • Ashley Robb-Swan,
  • Sharon Nichols,
  • Tao Song,
  • Lu Le,
  • Carl Rimmele,
  • Scott Matthews,
  • Kate A. Yurgil,
  • Angela Drake,
  • Zhengwei Ji,
  • Jian Guo,
  • Chung-Kuan Cheng,
  • Roland R. Lee,
  • Dewleen G. Baker,
  • Mingxiong Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12040987
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. 987

Abstract

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Blast-related mild traumatic brain injury (bmTBI) often leads to long-term sequalae, but diagnostic approaches are lacking due to insufficient knowledge about the predominant pathophysiology. This study aimed to build a diagnostic model for future verification by applying machine-learning based support vector machine (SVM) modeling to diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) datasets to elucidate white-matter features that distinguish bmTBI from healthy controls (HC). Twenty subacute/chronic bmTBI and 19 HC combat-deployed personnel underwent DTI. Clinically relevant features for modeling were selected using tract-based analyses that identified group differences throughout white-matter tracts in five DTI metrics to elucidate the pathogenesis of injury. These features were then analyzed using SVM modeling with cross validation. Tract-based analyses revealed abnormally decreased radial diffusivity (RD), increased fractional anisotropy (FA) and axial/radial diffusivity ratio (AD/RD) in the bmTBI group, mostly in anterior tracts (29 features). SVM models showed that FA of the anterior/superior corona radiata and AD/RD of the corpus callosum and anterior limbs of the internal capsule (5 features) best distinguished bmTBI from HCs with 89% accuracy. This is the first application of SVM to identify prominent features of bmTBI solely based on DTI metrics in well-defined tracts, which if successfully validated could promote targeted treatment interventions.

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