| Literature DB >> 31258507 |
Abstract
Introduction: By definition, post-traumatic headache (PTH) attributed to mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is not associated with brain structural abnormalities that are seen on routine clinical inspection of brain images. However, subtle brain structural abnormalities, as well as functional abnormalities, detected via research imaging techniques yield insights into the pathophysiology of PTH. The objective of this manuscript is to summarize published findings regarding research imaging of the brain in PTH attributed to mTBI.Entities:
Keywords: brain imaging; concussion; diffusion tensor imaging; functional connectivity; functional magnetic resonance imaging; migraine; post-traumatic headache; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2019 PMID: 31258507 PMCID: PMC6587675 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00615
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Imaging findings during acute post-traumatic headache.
| Alhilali et al. ( | Acute | DTI | mTBI with PTH of migraine phenotype vs. mTBI without PTH of migraine phenotype | PTH of migraine phenotype: lower FA in corpus callosum and fornix/septohippocampal circuit. |
| Delic et al. ( | Acute | DTI | 1) mTBI with PTH of migraine phenotype vs. mTBI without PTH of migraine phenotype 2) mTBI with PTH of migraine phenotype vs. migraine controls and vs. HC | mTBI with PTH of migraine phenotype vs. all other groups: lower SE of FA dataInverse correlation between SE and time to recovery.Accuracy for differentiating PTH of migraine phenotype from a) controls: specificity 95%, sensitivity 77% b) mTBI without PTH of a migraine phenotype: specificity 75%, sensitivity 81% |
| Ghodadra et al. ( | Acute | DTI | mTBI with PTH vs. mTBI without PTH | PTH: lower FA in splenium of corpus callosum; higher FA in genu of corpus callosum |
Diffusion tensor imaging studies demonstrate anomalies in white matter tract integrity in acute PTH due to mild traumatic brain injury.
DTI, diffusion tensor imaging; mTBI, mild traumatic brain injury; PTH, post-traumatic headache; FA, fractional anisotropy; HC, healthy control subject; SE, Shannon Entropy.
Imaging studies that investigated acute and persistent post-traumatic headache or prediction of persistent post-traumatic headache.
| Obermann et al. ( | 1) Acute | Gray matter density | 1) Acute PTH vs. HC | Acute PTH vs. HC: no differences PPTH vs. HC: less gray matter density in anterior cingulate cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in PPTH 12 months: those who had PPTH at 3 months, but resolved prior to 12 months had normal gray matter density |
| Sarmento et al. ( | 1) Acute | MRS | HC | Reduced NAA/creatinine in frontal lobes (anterior, anterior and posterior medial), parietal lobes (medial). Increased choline/creatinine in frontal lobes (posterior, anterior medial), parietal lobes (medial). |
| Niu et al. ( | Acute: predicting development of PPTH | Functional connectivity | PPTH vs. PTH resolution during acute phase | Connectivity of PAG with inferior parietal lobule and with precuneus predicted persistence of PTH: 100% sensitivity and 78% specificity |
A study of gray matter density in those with PTH attributed to whiplash showed less gray matter in PPTH, but not acute PTH, compared with healthy controls. An MRS study that combined individuals with acute PTH with those who had PPTH into one group, found evidence for reduced neuronal vitality, increased membrane turnover and cell proliferation in PTH. A functional connectivity study demonstrated promise for using measures of periaqueductal gray connectivity for predicting the persistence of PTH.
PTH, post-traumatic headache; HC, healthy control subject; MRS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy; NAA, N-acetylspartate; PPTH, persistent post-traumatic headache; PAG, periaqueductal gray.
PTH attributed to whiplash.
Imaging findings during persistent post-traumatic headache.
| Chong et al. ( | Persistent | Cortical thickness | HC | Less thickness in frontal (superior, caudal middle, precentral) and parietal lobes (precuneus, supramarginal, inferior, superior). |
| Negative correlations between superior frontal thickness with headache frequency. | ||||
| Chong et al. ( | Persistent | DTI | 1) Migraine | vs. Migraine: DTI differences in anterior thalamic radiations, cingulum, inferior and superior longitudinal fasciculi, uncinate fasciculi, corticospinal tract. |
| Positive correlation between cingulum angular bundle MD and RD with headache frequency. | ||||
| vs. HC: DTI differences in anterior thalamic radiations, cingulum, corticospinal tract, inferior longitudinal fasciculus, uncinate fasciculus, forceps major and minor. | ||||
| Gilkey et al. ( | Persistent | CBF | 1) Migraine | vs. Migraine + HC: reduced regional CBF; greater regional and hemispheric CBF asymmetries. |
| Schwedt et al. ( | Persistent | Regional volumes, cortical thickness, surface area, curvature | 1) Migraine | vs. Migraine: structural differences in frontal (lateral orbitofrontal, caudal middle, superior) and parietal lobes (precuneus, supramarginal). |
| vs. HC (only considering regions that differed between PPTH vs. Migraine): frontal (lateral orbitofrontal, superior) and parietal lobes (supramarginal). | ||||
| Dumkrieger et al. ( | Persistent | Static and dynamic functional connectivity | 1) Migraine | vs. Migraine (static connectivity): 17 region pairs that included somatosensory, insula, hypothalamus, anterior and middle cingulate, temporal pole, supramarginal, superior parietal, middle occipital, lingual, pulvinar, precuneus, cuneus, somatomotor, ventromedial prefrontal, and dorsolateral prefrontal regions. |
| Correlations between years with headache and headache frequency with static connectivity of a few region pairs. | ||||
| vs. Migraine (dynamic connectivity): 10 region pairs that included somatosensory, hypothalamus, middle cingulate, temporal pole, supramarginal, superior parietal, lingual gyrus, somatomotor, precentral, posterior cingulate, middle frontal, fusiform, parieto-occipital, and amygdala regions. | ||||
| Correlations between headache frequency and pain intensity with dynamic connectivity with a couple region pairs. | ||||
| vs. HC (only considering regions that differed between PPTH vs. Migraine; static connectivity): dorsolateral prefrontal, ventromedial prefrontal, middle cingulate, somatomotor, pulvinar, insula, hypothalamus. | ||||
| vs. HC (only considering regions that differed between PPTH vs. Migraine; dynamic connectivity): somatosensory, lingual, middle cingulate, supramarginal, temporal pole, middle frontal. |
Studies investigating brain structure and regional cerebral blood flow demonstrate differences between those with PPTH vs. healthy controls and vs. those with migraine. Correlations between some of the structural measures with headache frequency provide additional evidence for a relationship between the structural changes with PPTH.
HC, healthy control subject; DTI, diffusion tensor imaging; MD, mean diffusivity; RD, radial diffusivity; CBF, cerebral blood flow; PPTH, persistent post-traumatic headache.