Sundman Mark H, Hall Eric E, Chen Nan-Kuei
Brain Imaging and Analysis Center, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Exercise Science, Elon University, Elon, NC, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis Parkinsonism. 2014 Jan 31;4. doi: 10.4172/2161-0460.1000137.
Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) are induced by sudden acceleration-deceleration and/or rotational forces acting on the brain. Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) has been identified as one of the chief underlying causes of morbidity and mortality in head trauma incidents. DAIs refer to microscopic white matter (WM) injuries as a result of shearing forces that induce pathological and anatomical changes within the brain, which potentially contribute to significant impairments later in life. These microscopic injuries are often unidentifiable by the conventional computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) scans employed by emergency departments to initially assess head trauma patients and, as a result, TBIs are incredibly difficult to diagnose. The impairments associated with TBI may be caused by secondary mechanisms that are initiated at the moment of injury, but often have delayed clinical presentations that are difficult to assess due to the initial misdiagnosis. As a result, the true consequences of these head injuries may go unnoticed at the time of injury and for many years thereafter. The purpose of this review is to investigate these consequences of TBI and their potential link to neurodegenerative disease (ND). This review will summarize the current epidemiological findings, the pathological similarities, and new neuroimaging techniques that may help delineate the relationship between TBI and ND. Lastly, this review will discuss future directions and propose new methods to overcome the limitations that are currently impeding research progress. It is imperative that improved techniques are developed to adequately and retrospectively assess TBI history in patients that may have been previously undiagnosed in order to increase the validity and reliability across future epidemiological studies. The authors introduce a new surveillance tool (Retrospective Screening of Traumatic Brain Injury Questionnaire, RESTBI) to address this concern.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是由作用于大脑的突然加速 - 减速和/或旋转力引起的。弥漫性轴索损伤(DAI)已被确定为头部创伤事件中发病和死亡的主要潜在原因之一。DAI是指由于剪切力导致大脑内发生病理和解剖学变化的微观白质(WM)损伤,这可能在以后的生活中导致严重损伤。这些微观损伤通常无法通过急诊科用于初步评估头部创伤患者的传统计算机断层扫描(CT)和磁共振(MR)扫描识别,因此,TBI极其难以诊断。与TBI相关的损伤可能由损伤时启动的继发性机制引起,但往往具有延迟的临床表现,由于最初的误诊而难以评估。因此,这些头部损伤的真正后果在受伤时以及此后的许多年可能都未被注意到。本综述的目的是研究TBI的这些后果及其与神经退行性疾病(ND)的潜在联系。本综述将总结当前的流行病学研究结果、病理相似性以及可能有助于阐明TBI与ND之间关系的新神经影像学技术。最后,本综述将讨论未来的方向并提出新方法以克服目前阻碍研究进展的局限性。必须开发改进的技术,以充分且回顾性地评估可能先前未被诊断的患者的TBI病史,从而提高未来流行病学研究的有效性和可靠性。作者引入了一种新的监测工具(创伤性脑损伤回顾性筛查问卷,RESTBI)来解决这一问题。