| Literature DB >> 29901414 |
Christine L Mac Donald1,2, Jason Barber1, Jason Wright3, David Coppel1, Nina De Lacy4, Steve Ottinger1, Suzanne Peck5, Chris Panks1, Samantha Sun1, Kody Zalewski1, Nancy Temkin1,6.
Abstract
This study longitudinally assessed 10- to 14-year-old patients with sports and recreational concussion (n = 22) who remained symptomatic 3 to 4weeks post-injury compared with typically developing controls (n = 24). Examination by multi-modal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and multi-domain clinical outcome measures was completed at 1-month and 6-months post-injury. Concussion patients showed evidence of improvement by 6-month follow-up in domains of cognitive function, whereas measures of psychological health were less resolved with patients exhibiting sustained symptoms of depression, behavior impairment, and concussion symptoms. Quantitative neuroimaging measures identified measures indicative of chronic injury with regional reductions observed by both volumetric segmentation and white matter fractional anisotropy (FA) from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Volumetric reductions (p < 0.01) were observed in the middle anterior and posterior portions of the corpus callosum, and right caudal anterior cingulate cortex of patients, although none held after strict correction. Examination of the FA data identified significant reductions in the left middle frontal gyrus white matter (p = 0.0003). Linear regression analysis on the 6-month depression outcome variable using the initial clinical, demographic, and imaging measures identified the top predictive models to include concussion diagnosis, and initial symptoms of depression, concussion symptoms, and sleep impairment with additional contribution from other measures of mental health, behavior impairment, and quality of life depending on the model (adjusted r-squared = 0.69 indicating strong predictive ability). This study supports further inclusion of mental health rehabilitation and imaging supplementing traditional cognitive rehabilitation strategies employed in these young athletes.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; concussion, longitudinal study; pediatrics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29901414 DOI: 10.1089/neu.2018.5629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurotrauma ISSN: 0897-7151 Impact factor: 5.269