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Tractography-Pathology Correlations in Traumatic Brain Injury: A TRACK-TBI Study

Authors :
Amber L. Nolan
Ramon Diaz-Arrastia
Amy J. Markowitz
Allison Stevens
Bram R. Diamond
Geoffrey T. Manley
Cathrine Petersen
Brian L. Edlow
Bruce Fischl
Pratik Mukherjee
Sonia Jain
Andre van der Kouwe
Ruopeng Wang
Daniel P. Perl
C. Dirk Keene
Diego Iacono
Christine L. Mac Donald
Source :
Journal of neurotrauma, vol 38, iss 12, J Neurotrauma
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2021.

Abstract

Diffusion tractography MRI can infer changes in network connectivity in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), but pathological substrates of disconnected tracts have not been well-defined due to a lack of high-resolution imaging with histopathological validation. We developed an ex vivo MRI protocol to analyze tract terminations at 750 μm resolution, followed by histopathologic evaluation of white matter pathology, and applied these methods to a 60-year-old man who died 26 days after TBI. Analysis of 74 cerebral hemispheric white matter regions revealed a heterogeneous distribution of tract disruptions. Associated histopathology identified variable white matter injury with patchy deposition of amyloid precursor protein and loss of neurofilament-positive axonal processes, myelin dissolution, astrogliosis, microgliosis, and perivascular hemosiderin-laden macrophages. Multiple linear regression revealed that tract disruption strongly correlated with neurofilament loss. Ex vivo diffusion MRI can detect tract disruptions in the human brain that reflect axonal injury.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurotrauma, vol 38, iss 12, J Neurotrauma
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c814433911f079e675144f7ed0f527c6