| Literature DB >> 25206689 |
Sang Seok Yeo1, Sung Ho Jang1.
Abstract
Transtentorial herniation is one of the causes of motor weakness in traumatic brain injury. In this study, we report on a patient who underwent decompressive craniectomy due to traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage. Brain CT images taken after surgery showed intracerebral hemorrhage in the left fronto-temporal lobe and left transtentorial herniation. The patient presented with severe paralysis of the right extremities at the time of intracerebral hemorrhage onset, but the limb motor function recovered partially at 6 months after onset and to nearly normal level at 27 months. Through diffusion tensor tractography, the left corticospinal tract was disrupted below the cerebral peduncle at 1 month after onset and the disrupted left corticospinal tract was reconstructed at 27 months. These findings suggest that recovery of limb motor function in a patient with traumatic transtentorial herniation can come to be true by recovery of corticospinal tract.Entities:
Keywords: corticospinal tract; diffusion tensor imaging; diffusion tensor tractography; grants-supported paper; intracerebral hemorrhage; motor paralysis; neural regeneration; neuroimaging; neuroimaing; neuroregeneration; photographs-containing paper; transcranial magnetic stimulation; transtentorial herniation; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2013 PMID: 25206689 PMCID: PMC4146130 DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.1673-5374.2013.05.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Regen Res ISSN: 1673-5374 Impact factor: 5.135
Figure 1Brain CT, MRI images and diffusion tensor tractography results of the corticospinal tract in the included patient.
(A) Brain CT images after surgery show intracerebral hemorrhage in the left fronto-temporal lobes and left transtentorial herniation (arrow). Brain MRI images (1 and 27 months after onset) reveal shrinkage of the left cerebral peduncle (arrow). R: Right.
(B) Results of diffusion tensor tractography. The first (1 month after head trauma) and second (27 months after onset) diffusion tensor tractography for the corticospinal tracts (yellow) in the right hemispheres showed that fiber tracts passed along the known corticospinal tract pathway. On the first diffusion tensor tractography of the affected (left) hemisphere, the corticospinal tract (red) was disrupted below the cerebral peduncle (blue arrow) and connected to the right hemisphere via transpontine fibers. The transpontine connection fibers (red) in the right hemisphere may be related to compensatory mechanism after motor weakness or corticospinal tract injury. However, the left corticospinal tract (red) originated from the left primary motor cortex and descended through the left cerebral peduncle (blue arrow) on the second diffusion tensor tractography. R: Right.
Changes of motor function in the included patient
Diffusion tensor image parameters in regions of interest on the corticospinal tract pathway