| Literature DB >> 30501460 |
Tsen-Hsuan Lin1, Peng Sun1, Mitchell Hallman1, Fay C Hwang1, Michael Wallendorf2, Wilson Z Ray3,4,5, William M Spees1,3, Sheng-Kwei Song1,3,5.
Abstract
Neuroimaging plays an important role in assessing axonal pathology after traumatic spinal cord injury. However, coexisting inflammation confounds imaging assessment of the severity of axonal injury. Herein, we applied diffusion basis spectrum imaging (DBSI) to quantitatively differentiate and quantify underlying pathologies in traumatic spinal cord injury at 3 days post-injury. Results reveal that DBSI was capable of detecting and differentiating axonal injury, demyelination, and inflammation-associated edema and cell infiltration in contusion-injured spinal cords. DBSI was able to detect and quantify axonal loss in the presence of white matter tract swelling. The DBSI-defined apparent axonal volume correlated with the corresponding histological markers. DBSI-derived pathological metrics could serve as neuroimaging biomarkers to differentiate and quantify coexisting white matter pathologies in spinal cord injury, providing potential surrogate outcome measures to assess spinal cord injury progression and response to therapies.Entities:
Keywords: axonal injury; axonal volume; demyelination; diffusion MRI; inflammation; lesion cavity; spinal cord injury
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30501460 PMCID: PMC6648203 DOI: 10.1089/neu.2018.6016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurotrauma ISSN: 0897-7151 Impact factor: 5.269