Literature DB >> 24055569

Clinical correlates of high cervical fractional anisotropy in acute cervical spinal cord injury.

Aditya Vedantam1, Gerald Eckardt1, Marjorie C Wang1, Brian D Schmit2, Shekar N Kurpad3.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Fractional anisotropy (FA) of the high cervical cord (C1-C2), rostral to the injury site, correlates with upper limb function in patients with chronic cervical spinal cord injury (SCI). In acute cervical SCI, this relationship has not been investigated. The objective of this study was to identify functional correlates of FA of the high cervical cord in a series of patients with acute cervical SCI.
METHODS: Traumatic cervical SCI patients who underwent presurgical cervical spine diffusion tensor imaging at our institution were reviewed for this study. FA of the whole cord as well as the lateral corticospinal tracts (CSTs) was calculated on axial images from C1-C2. Upper limb motor (C5-T1) and sensory (C2-T1) function scores were extracted from the admission American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) examinations. Correlation analysis for FA with ASIA examinations was performed using a Pearson correlation.
RESULTS: Twelve subjects (9 men, 3 women; mean age 54.7 ± 4.0 years) underwent cervical spine diffusion tensor imaging at a mean duration of 3.6 ± 0.9 days postinjury. No patient had cord compression or intramedullary T2-weighted hyperintensities within the C1-C2 segments. FA correlated with upper limb motor score (whole cord: r = 0.59, P = .04; CST: 0.67, P = .01) and the ASIA grade (whole cord: r = 0.61, P = .03; CST: r = 0.71, P = .009). No correlation was found between FA and sensory scores.
CONCLUSIONS: FA of the whole cervical cord as well as the CST, rostral to the injury site, is associated with preserved upper limb motor function as well as superior ASIA grades after acute cervical SCI. FA of the high cervical cord is a potential biomarker of neural injury after acute cervical SCI.
Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Diffusion tensor imaging; Fractional anisotropy; Spinal cord; Spinal cord injury

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24055569     DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2013.09.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World Neurosurg        ISSN: 1878-8750            Impact factor:   2.104


  17 in total

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Authors:  Aditya Vedantam; Ping Hou; T Linda Chi; Patrick M Dougherty; Kenneth R Hess; Ashwin Viswanathan
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2.  A Novel MRI Biomarker of Spinal Cord White Matter Injury: T2*-Weighted White Matter to Gray Matter Signal Intensity Ratio.

Authors:  A R Martin; B De Leener; J Cohen-Adad; D W Cadotte; S Kalsi-Ryan; S F Lange; L Tetreault; A Nouri; A Crawley; D J Mikulis; H Ginsberg; M G Fehlings
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Authors:  Y Liu; C Kong; L Cui; X Yuan; P Zhao; Y Zhang; Y Guan; X Chen
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Review 6.  Role of diffusion tensor imaging and tractography in spinal cord injury.

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7.  Multispectral diffusion-weighted MRI of the instrumented cervical spinal cord: a preliminary study of 5 cases.

Authors:  Kevin M Koch; Sampada Bhave; S Sivaram Kaushik; Andrew S Nencka; Matthew D Budde
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Review 8.  Pain and spinal cord imaging measures in children with demyelinating disease.

Authors:  Nadia Barakat; Mark P Gorman; Leslie Benson; Lino Becerra; David Borsook
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2015-09-06       Impact factor: 4.881

Review 9.  Traumatic and nontraumatic spinal cord injury: pathological insights from neuroimaging.

Authors:  Gergely David; Siawoosh Mohammadi; Allan R Martin; Julien Cohen-Adad; Nikolaus Weiskopf; Alan Thompson; Patrick Freund
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurol       Date:  2019-10-31       Impact factor: 42.937

10.  Longitudinal In Vivo Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging Remote from the Lesion Site in Rat Spinal Cord Injury.

Authors:  Alice Motovylyak; Nathan P Skinner; Brian D Schmit; Natasha Wilkins; Shekar N Kurpad; Matthew D Budde
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2018-11-19       Impact factor: 4.869

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