4.7 Article

Prospective Study of Gray Matter Atrophy Following Pediatric Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 100, Issue 5, Pages E516-E527

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000201470

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This study aimed to examine the structural brain changes and age-at-injury effects in pediatric patients with mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI). The results showed reduced cortical thickness and hippocampal volumes in pmTBI patients, but these changes were not associated with age at injury. The study also found that postconcussive symptoms and cognitive deficits were observed in these patients.
Background and ObjectivesThe clinical and physiologic time course for recovery following pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI) remains actively debated. The primary objective of the current study was to prospectively examine structural brain changes (cortical thickness and subcortical volumes) and age-at-injury effects. A priori study hypotheses predicted reduced cortical thickness and hippocampal volumes up to 4 months postinjury, which would be inversely associated with age at injury.MethodsProspective cohort study design with consecutive recruitment. Study inclusion adapted from American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine (upper threshold) and Zurich Concussion in Sport Group (minimal threshold) and diagnosed by Emergency Department and Urgent Care clinicians. Major neurologic, psychiatric, or developmental disorders were exclusionary. Clinical (Common Data Element) and structural (3 T MRI) evaluations within 11 days (subacute visit [SA]) and at 4 months (early chronic visit [EC]) postinjury. Age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HC) to control for repeat testing/neurodevelopment. Clinical outcomes based on self-report and cognitive testing. Structural images quantified with FreeSurfer (version 7.1.1).ResultsA total of 208 patients with pmTBI (age = 14.4 & PLUSMN; 2.9; 40.4% female) and 176 HC (age = 14.2 & PLUSMN; 2.9; 42.0% female) were included in the final analyses (>80% retention). Reduced cortical thickness (right rostral middle frontal gyrus; d = -0.49) and hippocampal volumes (d = -0.24) observed for pmTBI, but not associated with age at injury. Hippocampal volume recovery was mediated by loss of consciousness/posttraumatic amnesia. Significantly greater postconcussive symptoms and cognitive deficits were observed at SA and EC visits, but were not associated with the structural abnormalities. Structural abnormalities slightly improved balanced classification accuracy above and beyond clinical gold standards ( increment +3.9%), with a greater increase in specificity ( increment +7.5%) relative to sensitivity ( increment +0.3%).DiscussionCurrent findings indicate that structural brain abnormalities may persist up to 4 months post-pmTBI and are partially mediated by initial markers of injury severity. These results contribute to a growing body of evidence suggesting prolonged physiologic recovery post-pmTBI. In contrast, there was no evidence for age-at-injury effects or physiologic correlates of persistent symptoms in our sample.

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