• J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. · Dec 2012

    A longitudinal MRI study of traumatic axonal injury in patients with moderate and severe traumatic brain injury.

    • Kent Gøran Moen, Toril Skandsen, Mari Folvik, Veronika Brezova, Kjell Arne Kvistad, Jana Rydland, Geoffrey T Manley, and Anne Vik.
    • Department of Neuroscience, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim N-7489, Norway. kent.g.moen@ntnu.no
    • J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr.. 2012 Dec 1;83(12):1193-200.

    ObjectiveTo study the evolution of traumatic axonal injury (TAI) detected by structural MRI in patients with moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) during the first year and relate findings to outcome.Methods58 patients with TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale score 3-13) were examined with MRI at a median of 7 days, 3 months and 12 months post injury. TAI lesions were evaluated blinded and categorised into three stages based on location: hemispheres, corpus callosum and brainstem. Lesions in T2* weighted gradient echo (GRE), fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) and diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) were counted and FLAIR lesion volumes were estimated. Inter-rater reliability score was calculated. Outcome was assessed 12 months post injury using the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended.ResultsIn the initial MRI, 31% had brainstem lesions compared with 17% at 3 months (p=0.008). In the FLAIR sequences, number and volumes of lesions were reduced from early to 3 months (p<0.001). In T2*GRE sequences, the number of lesions persisted at 3 months but was reduced at 12 months (p=0.007). The number of lesions in DWI and volume of FLAIR lesions on early MRI predicted worse clinical outcome in adjusted analyses (p<0.05).ConclusionThis is the first study to demonstrate and quantify attenuation of non-haemorrhagic TAI lesions on structural MRI during the first 3 months after TBI; most importantly, the disappearance of brainstem lesions. Haemorrhagic TAI lesions attenuate first after 3 months. Only early MRI findings predicted clinical outcome after adjustment for other prognostic factors. Hence valuable clinical information may be missed if MRI is performed too late after TBI.

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