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Prevalence of Potentially Clinically Significant Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings in Athletes with and without Sport-Related Concussion

Authors :
Kevin M. Koch
John L. Ulmer
Jason P. Mihalik
Daniel L. Huber
Lindsay D. Nelson
Andrew P. Klein
Timothy B. Meier
Stefan M. Duma
Thomas W. McAllister
Kevin M. Guskiewicz
Yu-Chien Wu
Andrew S. Nencka
Alison Brooks
John P. DiFiori
Steven Rowson
Jaroslaw Harezlak
Michael McCrea
Joshua M. Bonis
Vincent P. Mathews
Christopher C. Giza
Andrew R. Mayer
Steven P. Broglio
Julie E. Tetzlaff
Joshua Goldman
Grant Sinson
Andrew J. Saykin
Source :
Journal of neurotrauma, vol 36, iss 11, J Neurotrauma
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2019.

Abstract

Previous studies have shown that mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) can cause abnormalities in clinically relevant magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences. No large-scale study, however, has prospectively assessed this in athletes with sport-related concussion (SRC). The aim of the current study was to characterize and compare the prevalence of acute, trauma-related MRI findings and clinically significant, non-specific MRI findings in athletes with and without SRC. College and high-school athletes were prospectively enrolled and participated in scanning sessions between January 2015 through August 2017. Concussed contact sport athletes (n = 138; 14 female [F]; 19.5 ± 1.6 years) completed up to four scanning sessions after SRC. Non-concussed contact (n = 135; 15 F; 19.7 ± 1.6) and non-contact athletes (n = 96; 15 F; 20.0 ± 1.7) completed similar scanning sessions and served as controls. Board-certified neuroradiologists, blinded to SRC status, reviewed T(1)-weighted and T(2)-weighted fluid-attenuated inversion recovery and T(2)*-weighted and T(2)-weighted images for acute (i.e., injury-related) or non-acute findings that prompted recommendation for clinical follow-up. Concussed athletes were more likely to have MRI findings relative to contact (30.4% vs. 15.6%; odds ratio [OR] = 2.32; p = 0.01) and non-contact control athletes (19.8%; OR = 2.11; p = 0.04). Female athletes were more likely to have MRI findings than males (43.2% vs. 19.4%; OR = 2.62; p = 0.01). One athlete with SRC had an acute, injury-related finding; group differences were largely driven by increased rate of non-specific white matter hyperintensities in concussed athletes. This prospective, large-scale study demonstrates that

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurotrauma, vol 36, iss 11, J Neurotrauma
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c06116980e003dba0c48310c654cb044