| Literature DB >> 26627199 |
Gregory Scott1, Peter J Hellyer1,2, Anil F Ramlackhansingh1, David J Brooks1,3, Paul M Matthews1, David J Sharp4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traumatic brain injury can trigger chronic neuroinflammation, which may predispose to neurodegeneration. Animal models and human pathological studies demonstrate persistent inflammation in the thalamus associated with axonal injury, but this relationship has never been shown in vivo.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26627199 PMCID: PMC4666189 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-015-0445-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Fig. 1Increased thalamic microglial activation and white matter damage in TBI. a Statistical parametric maps (reproduced from [3]) rendered onto a standard T1 MRI image showing areas of significantly increased [11C]-PK11195 (PK) binding potentials (BP) in the TBI patients relative to controls. Bilateral increases in PK binding are seen in thalami. t values are shown. Voxels are shown significantly surpassing the voxel-wise threshold (p < 0.001) and the spatial extent threshold (10 voxels). Voxel-wise contrasts were performed on spatially normalised PK BP images, smoothed with a 12-mm full-width at half maximum (FWHM) Gaussian kernel, using SPM5 (see [3] for details). b PK BP in the thalamus and cortical grey matter, defined using anatomical regions of interest, in TBI patients (red) and controls. Group mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) is shown; ***p < 0.001. c Tract mask (blue) connecting the left thalamus (red) to the left anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) (green), produced using probabilistic tractography in healthy controls (see [12]). Fractional anisotropy (FA) was sampled using bilateral thalamo-cortical tract masks. d FA in thalamo-cortical (Thal-Ctx) body of the corpus callosum (CC) and across the white matter skeleton (Skel) in TBI patients (red) and controls; **p < 0.01
Fig. 2Correlation of thalamic microglial activation and white matter damage in relation to distance from thalamus. a Partial correlation of thalamic [11C]-PK11195 (PK) binding potentials (BP) and thalamo-cortical fractional anisotropy (FA), sampled with increasing distance from the thalamus in TBI patients. Distance of 0 mm reflects sampling from tracts involving the thalamus proper. R (red) and p values are shown, with a threshold of p = 0.05 (dotted line). b Plot of residuals after for thalamo-cortical FA (x-axis), sampled from a ring-shaped mask 2 mm from the outer border of the thalamus versus thalamic PK BP (y-axis). c Partial correlation of PK BP in cortical grey matter and thalamo-cortical FA, sampled and plotted as in a
Fig. 3How chronic microglial activation and axonal injury may be linked after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Microglial activation (green cells) and traumatic axonal injury in thalamo-cortical white matter tracts (red areas) have been demonstrated after TBI. Sites of chronic microglial activation can co-localise with axonal abnormality (a) as well as along the entire axonal tract affected by injury. Remote from sites of primary axonal injury, microglia may be observed both in retrograde projection areas, towards the cell bodies of damaged neurons (b), and in anterograde areas (c and d). The thalamus is a highly connected structure. Thalamic microglial activation may be observed after TBI because of the high density of connections to damaged axons. The number of cortico-thalamic projections far exceeds thalamo-cortical projections. If microglial activation preferentially favours anterograde involvement, then relatively increased activation would be expected in the thalamus (c) compared to corresponding cortical areas (b)