NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2014)

Single-subject-based whole-brain MEG slow-wave imaging approach for detecting abnormality in patients with mild traumatic brain injury

  • Ming-Xiong Huang,
  • Sharon Nichols,
  • Dewleen G. Baker,
  • Ashley Robb,
  • Annemarie Angeles,
  • Kate A. Yurgil,
  • Angela Drake,
  • Michael Levy,
  • Tao Song,
  • Robert McLay,
  • Rebecca J. Theilmann,
  • Mithun Diwakar,
  • Victoria B. Risbrough,
  • Zhengwei Ji,
  • Charles W. Huang,
  • Douglas G. Chang,
  • Deborah L. Harrington,
  • Laura Muzzatti,
  • Jose M. Canive,
  • J. Christopher Edgar,
  • Yu-Han Chen,
  • Roland R. Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2014.06.004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. C
pp. 109 – 119

Abstract

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of sustained impairment in military and civilian populations. However, mild TBI (mTBI) can be difficult to detect using conventional MRI or CT. Injured brain tissues in mTBI patients generate abnormal slow-waves (1–4 Hz) that can be measured and localized by resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG). In this study, we develop a voxel-based whole-brain MEG slow-wave imaging approach for detecting abnormality in patients with mTBI on a single-subject basis. A normative database of resting-state MEG source magnitude images (1–4 Hz) from 79 healthy control subjects was established for all brain voxels. The high-resolution MEG source magnitude images were obtained by our recent Fast-VESTAL method. In 84 mTBI patients with persistent post-concussive symptoms (36 from blasts, and 48 from non-blast causes), our method detected abnormalities at the positive detection rates of 84.5%, 86.1%, and 83.3% for the combined (blast-induced plus with non-blast causes), blast, and non-blast mTBI groups, respectively. We found that prefrontal, posterior parietal, inferior temporal, hippocampus, and cerebella areas were particularly vulnerable to head trauma. The result also showed that MEG slow-wave generation in prefrontal areas positively correlated with personality change, trouble concentrating, affective lability, and depression symptoms. Discussion is provided regarding the neuronal mechanisms of MEG slow-wave generation due to deafferentation caused by axonal injury and/or blockages/limitations of cholinergic transmission in TBI. This study provides an effective way for using MEG slow-wave source imaging to localize affected areas and supports MEG as a tool for assisting the diagnosis of mTBI.

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