4.5 Article

Acute Post-Concussive Assessments of Brain Tissue Magnetism Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 38, Issue 7, Pages 848-857

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2020.7322

Keywords

MRI; quantitative susceptibility mapping; sports concussion; susceptibility weighted imaging; tissue magnetism; traumatic brain injury

Funding

  1. Department of Defense Broad Agency Announcement for Extramural Medical Research [W81XWH-14-1-0561]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, NIH [UL1TR001436]

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Recent research has shown the potential of QSM in producing biomarkers of brain injury. QSM measurements correlated closely with symptom duration, and have promising prognostication capabilities in predicting symptoms lasting more than two weeks. The study provides initial evidence of the usefulness of acute QSM measurements in the post-concussion setting.
Recent studies have demonstrated the promising capabilities of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based quantitative susceptibility maps (QSM) in producing biomarkers of brain injury. The present study aims to further explore acute QSM changes in athletes after sports concussion and investigate prognostication capabilities of QSM-derived imaging metrics. The QSM were derived from neurological MRI data acquired on a cohort (n = 78) of concussed male American football athletes within 48 h of injury. The MRI-derived QSM values in subcortical gray and white matter compartments after concussion showed differences relative to a matched uninjured control group (white matter: z = 3.04, p = 0.002, subcortical gray matter: z = -2.07, p = 0.04). Subcortical gray matter QSM MRI measurements also correlated strongly with duration of symptoms (rho = -0.46, p = 0.002) within a subcohort of subjects who had symptom durations for at least one week (n = 39). The acute QSM MRI metrics showed promising prognostication capabilities, with subcortical gray matter compartment QSM values yielding a mean classification area under the curve performance of 0.78 when predicting symptoms of more than two weeks in duration. The results of the study reproduce previous acute post-concussion group QSM findings and provide promising initial prognostication capabilities of acute QSM measurements in a post-concussion setting.

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