Mayer Andrew R, Toulouse Trent, Klimaj Stefan, Ling Josef M, Pena Amanda, Bellgowan Patrick S F
1 The Mind Research Network/Lovelace Biomedical and Environmental Research Institute , Albuquerque, New Mexico.
J Neurotrauma. 2014 Jan 15;31(2):189-97. doi: 10.1089/neu.2013.3069. Epub 2013 Nov 20.
Abstract Although several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have been conducted in human models of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), to date no studies have explicitly examined how injury may differentially affect both the positive phase of the hemodynamic response function (HRF) as well as the post-stimulus undershoot (PSU). Animal models suggest that the acute and semi-acute stages of mTBI are associated with significant disruptions in metabolism and to the microvasculature, both of which could impact on the HRF. Therefore, fMRI data were collected on a cohort of 30 semi-acute patients with mTBI (16 males; 27.83±9.97 years old; 13.00±2.18 years of education) and 30 carefully matched healthy controls (HC; 16 males; 27.17±10.08 years old; 13.37±2.31 years of education) during a simple sensory-motor task. Patients reported increased cognitive, somatic, and emotional symptoms relative to controls, although no group differences were detected on traditional neuropsychological examination. There were also no differences between patients with mTBI and controls on fMRI data using standard analytic techniques, although mTBI exhibited a greater volume of activation during the task qualitatively. A significant Group×Time interaction was observed in the right supramarginal gyrus, bilateral primary and secondary visual cortex, and the right parahippocampal gyrus. The interaction was the result of an earlier time-to-peak and positive magnitude shift throughout the estimated HRF in patients with mTBI relative to HC. This difference in HRF shape combined with the greater volume of activated tissue may be indicative of a potential compensatory mechanism to injury. The current study demonstrates that direct examination and modeling of HRF characteristics beyond magnitude may provide additional information about underlying neuropathology that is not available with more standard fMRI analyses.
摘要 尽管已经在轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)的人体模型中进行了多项功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究,但迄今为止,尚无研究明确考察损伤如何不同程度地影响血流动力学反应函数(HRF)的正向阶段以及刺激后负向波(PSU)。动物模型表明,mTBI的急性和亚急性阶段与代谢及微血管系统的显著破坏有关,而这两者均可能影响HRF。因此,在一项简单的感觉运动任务期间,对30名患有mTBI的亚急性患者(16名男性;年龄27.83±9.97岁;受教育年限13.00±2.18年)和30名精心匹配的健康对照者(HC;16名男性;年龄27.17±10.08岁;受教育年限13.37±2.31年)收集了fMRI数据。与对照组相比,患者报告认知、躯体和情绪症状有所增加,尽管在传统神经心理学检查中未检测到组间差异。使用标准分析技术时,mTBI患者与对照组在fMRI数据上也没有差异,尽管定性来看mTBI在任务期间表现出更大的激活体积。在右侧缘上回、双侧初级和次级视觉皮层以及右侧海马旁回中观察到显著的组×时间交互作用。该交互作用是由于mTBI患者相对于HC在整个估计的HRF中达到峰值的时间更早且正向幅度发生了变化。HRF形状的这种差异与更大体积的激活组织相结合,可能表明存在对损伤的潜在代偿机制。当前研究表明,直接检查和模拟HRF幅度以外的特征可能会提供有关潜在神经病理学的额外信息,而这是更标准的fMRI分析所无法获得的。