Massachusetts General Hospital/Massachusetts Institute of Technology/Harvard Medical School/
J Neurosurg. 2014 Apr;120(4):864-72. doi: 10.3171/2013.12.JNS132093. Epub 2014 Feb 4.
Concussion, or mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), is a commonly occurring sports-related injury, especially in contact sports such as hockey. Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs), which appear as small, hypointense lesions on T₂*-weighted images, can result from TBI. The authors use susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) to automatically detect small hypointensities that may be subtle signs of chronic and acute damage due to both subconcussive and concussive injury. The goal was to investigate how the burden of these hypointensities changes over time, over a playing season, and postconcussion, in comparison with subjects who did not suffer a medically observed and diagnosed concussion.
Images were obtained in 45 university-level adult male and female ice hockey players before and after a single Canadian Interuniversity Sports season. In addition, 11 subjects (5 men and 6 women) underwent imaging at 72 hours, 2 weeks, and 2 months after concussion. To identify subtle changes in brain tissue and potential CMBs, nonvessel clusters of hypointensities on SWI were automatically identified, and a hypointensity burden index was calculated for all subjects at the beginning of the season (BOS), the end of the season (EOS), and at postconcussion time points (where applicable).
A statistically significant increase in the hypointensity burden, relative to the BOS, was observed for male subjects with concussions at the 2-week postconcussion time point. A smaller, nonsignificant rise in the burden for female subjects with concussions was also observed within the same time period. There were no significant changes in burden for nonconcussed subjects of either sex between the BOS and EOS time points. However, there was a statistically significant difference in the burden between male and female subjects in the nonconcussed group at both the BOS and EOS time points, with males having a higher burden.
This method extends the utility of SWI from the enhancement and detection of larger (> 5 mm) CMBs, which are often observed in more severe cases of TBI, to cases involving smaller lesions in which visual detection of injury is difficult. The hypointensity burden metric proposed here shows statistically significant changes over time in the male subjects. A smaller, nonsignificant increase in the burden metric was observed in the female subjects.
脑震荡,即轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI),是一种常见的运动相关损伤,尤其是在接触性运动如曲棍球中。脑微出血(CMBs)在 T₂*-加权图像上表现为小的低信号病变,可由 TBI 引起。作者使用磁敏感加权成像(SWI)自动检测可能是由于亚急性和急性损伤引起的慢性和急性损伤的细微低信号。其目的是研究这些低信号的负荷如何随时间变化,在一个比赛季节内变化,以及在脑震荡后变化,与未遭受医学观察和诊断的脑震荡的受试者相比。
在一个加拿大大学间体育赛季前后,对 45 名大学水平的成年男性和女性冰球运动员进行了图像采集。此外,11 名受试者(5 名男性和 6 名女性)在脑震荡后 72 小时、2 周和 2 个月进行了成像。为了识别脑组织的细微变化和潜在的 CMBs,在 SWI 上自动识别非血管簇的低信号,并为所有受试者在赛季开始时(BOS)、赛季结束时(EOS)和脑震荡后时间点(适用时)计算低信号负荷指数。
在脑震荡后 2 周的时间点,与 BOS 相比,男性受试者的低信号负荷呈统计学显著增加。在同一时期,也观察到女性脑震荡受试者的负荷有较小但无统计学意义的上升。在 BOS 和 EOS 时间点之间,男女非脑震荡受试者的负荷均无显著变化。然而,在 BOS 和 EOS 时间点,非脑震荡组的男性和女性受试者的负荷之间存在统计学显著差异,男性的负荷更高。
这种方法将 SWI 的应用从增强和检测较大(> 5mm)CMBs 扩展到更严重的 TBI 病例中,扩展到视觉检测损伤困难的较小病变病例。这里提出的低信号负荷指标在男性受试者中显示出随时间的统计学显著变化。在女性受试者中,负荷指标观察到较小但无统计学意义的增加。