Department of Radiology, New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences, Newark, New Jersey, USA.
Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Brain Connect. 2020 Nov;10(9):479-489. doi: 10.1089/brain.2020.0812. Epub 2020 Oct 29.
Structural connectivity in the reorganizing spinal cord after injury dictates functional connectivity and hence the neurological outcome. As magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based structural parameters are mostly accessible across spinal cord injury (SCI) patients, we studied MRI-based spinal morphological changes and their relationship to neurological outcome in the rat model of cervical SCI. Functional connectivity assessments on patients with SCI rely heavily on MRI-based approaches to investigate the complete neural axis (both spinal cord and brain). Hence, underlying MRI-based structural and morphometric changes in the reorganizing spinal cord and their relationship to neurological outcomes is crucial for meaningful interpretation of functional connectivity changes across the neural axis. Young adult rats, aged 1.5 months, underwent a precise mechanical impact hemicontusion incomplete cervical SCI at the C4/C5 level, after which sensorimotor behavioral assessments were tracked during the reorganization period of 1-6 weeks, followed by MRI of the cervical spinal cord at 8 weeks after SCI. A significant ipsilesional forelimb motor debilitation was observed from 1 to 6 weeks after injury. Heat sensitivity testing (Hargreaves) showed ipsilesional forelimb hypersensitivity at 5 and 6 weeks after SCI. MRI of the cervical spine showed ipsilateral T1- and T2-weighted lesions across all SCI rats compared with no significant lesions in sham rats. Morphometric assessments of the lesional and nonlesional changes showed the diverse nature of their interindividual variability in the SCI receiving rats. While the various T1 and T2 MRI lesional volumes associated weakly or moderately with neurological outcome, the nonlesional spinal morphometric changes associated much more strongly. The results have important implications for interpreting functional MRI-based functional connectivity after SCI by providing vital underlying structural changes and their relative neurological impact. Impact statement Functional connectivity assessments on patients with SCI relies heavily upon MRI based approaches. Hence, underlying MRI based structural and morphometric changes in the reorganizing spinal cord and its relationship to neurological outcomes is vital for meaningful interpretation of functional connectivity changes across the complete neural axis (both spinal cord and the brain).
脊髓损伤后的结构连接决定了功能连接,进而决定了神经功能预后。由于磁共振成像(MRI)为基础的结构参数在大多数脊髓损伤(SCI)患者中均可获得,我们研究了基于 MRI 的脊髓形态变化及其与大鼠颈段 SCI 模型神经功能预后的关系。基于 MRI 的功能连接评估在 SCI 患者中很大程度上依赖于 MRI 方法来研究完整的神经轴(脊髓和大脑)。因此,在重组的脊髓中,潜在的基于 MRI 的结构和形态变化及其与神经功能预后的关系对于跨神经轴的功能连接变化的有意义解释至关重要。 1.5 月龄的年轻成年大鼠在 C4/C5 水平接受了精确的机械撞击半挫伤不完全性颈段 SCI,此后在重组期 1-6 周期间进行了感觉运动行为评估,然后在 SCI 后 8 周进行了颈段脊髓 MRI。 损伤后 1-6 周,观察到明显的同侧前肢运动障碍。热敏感测试(Hargreaves)显示 SCI 后 5 周和 6 周时同侧前肢过敏。与假手术组相比,所有 SCI 大鼠的颈椎 MRI 显示同侧 T1 和 T2 加权病变,而无明显病变。病变和非病变变化的形态学评估显示,接受 SCI 的大鼠个体间的多样性。尽管各种 T1 和 T2 MRI 病变体积与神经功能预后弱相关或中度相关,但非病变脊髓形态变化与神经功能预后的相关性要强得多。研究结果对解释 SCI 后基于功能 MRI 的功能连接具有重要意义,为解释功能连接变化提供了重要的潜在结构变化及其相对神经影响。