4.5 Article

Imaging of White Matter Injury Correlates with Plasma and Tissue Biomarkers in Pediatric Porcine Model of Traumatic Brain Injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 40, Issue 1-2, Pages 74-85

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2022.0178

Keywords

biomarker; diffusion tensor imaging; magnetic resonance spectroscopy; neurofilament light; traumatic brain injury

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This study used a four-week-old pediatric pig model to investigate the changes in white matter structures after traumatic brain injury (TBI) using diffusion tensor imaging and magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The findings revealed progressive anisotropy changes in major white matter tracts and correlations with cellular respiration markers and plasma biomarkers of injury. The study suggests the suitability of the pediatric pig model for future investigations of therapeutic agents for pediatric TBI.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) causes significant white matter injury, which has been characterized by various rodent and human clinical studies. The exact time course of imaging changes in a pediatric brain after TBI and its relation to biomarkers of injury and cellular function, however, is unknown. To study the changes in major white matter structures using a valid model of TBI that is comparable to a human pediatric brain in terms of size and anatomical features, we utilized a four-week-old pediatric porcine model of injury with controlled cortical impact (CCI). Using diffusion tensor imaging differential tractography, we show progressive anisotropy changes at major white matter tracts such as the corona radiata and inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus between day 1 and day 30 after injury. Moreover, correlational tractography shows a large part of bilateral corona radiata having positive correlation with the markers of cellular respiration. In contrast, bilateral corona radiata has a negative correlation with the plasma biomarkers of injury such as neurofilament light or glial fibrillary acidic protein. These are expected correlational findings given that higher integrity of white matter would be expected to correlate with lower injury biomarkers. We then studied the magnetic resonance spectroscopy findings and report decrease in a N-acetylaspartate/creatinine (NAA/Cr) ratio at the pericontusional cortex, subcortical white matter, corona radiata, thalamus, genu, and splenium of corpus callosum at 30 days indicating injury. There was also an increase in choline/creatinine ratio in these regions indicating rapid membrane turnover. Given the need for a pediatric TBI model that is comparable to human pediatric TBI, these data support the use of a pediatric pig model with CCI in future investigations of therapeutic agents. This model will allow future TBI researchers to rapidly translate our pre-clinical study findings into clinical trials for pediatric TBI.

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