Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jan 2022)

Refined Analysis of Chronic White Matter Changes after Traumatic Brain Injury and Repeated Sports-Related Concussions: Of Use in Targeted Rehabilitative Approaches?

  • Francesco Latini,
  • Markus Fahlström,
  • Fredrik Vedung,
  • Staffan Stensson,
  • Elna-Marie Larsson,
  • Mark Lubberink,
  • Yelverton Tegner,
  • Sven Haller,
  • Jakob Johansson,
  • Anders Wall,
  • Gunnar Antoni,
  • Niklas Marklund

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11020358
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 358

Abstract

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) or repeated sport-related concussions (rSRC) may lead to long-term memory impairment. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is helpful to reveal global white matter damage but may underestimate focal abnormalities. We investigated the distribution of post-injury regional white matter changes after TBI and rSRC. Six patients with moderate/severe TBI, and 12 athletes with rSRC were included ≥6 months post-injury, and 10 (age-matched) healthy controls (HC) were analyzed. The Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status was performed at the time of DTI. Major white matter pathways were tracked using q-space diffeomorphic reconstruction and analyzed for global and regional changes with a controlled false discovery rate. TBI patients displayed multiple classic white matter injuries compared with HC (p p < 0.05). While global analysis of DTI-based parameters did not reveal common abnormalities in TBI and rSRC, abnormalities to the fronto-thalamic network were observed in both groups using regional analysis of the white matter pathways. These results may be valuable to tailor individualized rehabilitative approaches for post-injury cognitive impairment in both TBI and rSRC patients.

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