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White matter degradation near cerebral microbleeds is associated with cognitive change after mild traumatic brain injury

Authors :
Andrei Irimia
Van Ngo
Nikhil N. Chaudhari
Fan Zhang
Shantanu H. Joshi
Anita N. Penkova
Lauren J. O'Donnell
Nasim Sheikh-Bahaei
Xiaoyu Zheng
Helena C. Chui
Source :
Neurobiol Aging
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To explore how cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) accompanying mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) reflect white matter (WM) degradation and cognitive decline, magnetic resonance images were acquired from 62 mTBI adults (imaged ∼7 days and ∼6 months post-injury) and 203 matched healthy controls. On average, mTBI participants had a count of 2.7 ± 2.6 traumatic CMBs in WM, located 6.1 ± 4.4 mm from cortex. At ∼6-month follow-up, 97% of CMBs were associated with significant reductions (34% ± 11%, qlt; 0.05) in the fractional anisotropy of WM streamlines within ∼1 cm of CMB locations. Male sex and older age were significant risk factors for larger reductions (qlt; 0.05). For CMBs in the corpus callosum, cingulum bundle, inferior and middle longitudinal fasciculi, fractional anisotropy changes were significantly and positively associated with changes in cognitive functions mediated by these structures (qlt; 0.05). Our findings distinguish traumatic from non-traumatic CMBs by virtue of surrounding WM alterations and challenge the assumption that traumatic CMBs are neurocognitively silent. Thus, mTBI with CMB findings can be described as a clinical endophenotype warranting longitudinal cognitive assessment.

Details

ISSN :
15581497
Volume :
120
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurobiology of aging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....045a5989fcd02de93ad9caa61e16ed70