| Literature DB >> 32411081 |
Qandeel Shafqat1,2,3,4, Jennaya Christensen2,4,5, A Max Hamilton1,2,3,4, Elizabeth Imhof1,2,3,4, Richelle M Mychasiuk2,4,5,6, Jeff F Dunn1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a debilitating but extremely common form of brain injury that affects a substantial number of people each year. mTBI is especially common in children and adolescents. Our understanding of mTBI pathophysiology is limited, and there is currently no accepted marker for disease severity. A potential marker for disease severity may be cerebrovascular dysfunction. Recent findings have implicated cerebrovascular alteration as an important component of mTBI and suggest it contributes to the development of persistent, long-term symptoms. In this paper, we conducted two studies to investigate whether mTBI affects venous drainage patterns in the central nervous system using alterations in the size of venous sinuses as a marker of changes in drainage. Using a closed head vertical weight-drop model and a lateral impact injury model of mTBI, we imaged and quantified the size of three major draining vessels in the adolescent rat brain using 9.4T MRI. Areas and volumes were quantified in the superior sagittal sinus and left and right transverse sinuses using images acquired from T2w MRI in one study and post-gadolinium T1w MRI in another. Our results indicated that the three venous sinuses were significantly larger in mTBI rats as compared to sham rats 1-day post injury but recovered to normal size 2 weeks after. Acutely enlarged sinuses post-mTBI may indicate abnormal venous drainage, and this could be suggestive of a cerebrovascular response to trauma.Entities:
Keywords: MRI-magnetic resonance imaging; animal model; concussion; mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI); sinus dilation; superior sagittal sinus (SSS); transverse sinuses (TS); venous drainage
Year: 2020 PMID: 32411081 PMCID: PMC7198763 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Time to right measured immediately post-mTBI or sham treatment. (A) Study 1 (mean±SD; sham n = 5; mTBI n = 12) and (B) Study 2 (mean±SD; sham n = 13; mTBI n = 14). Comparisons were done with a students t-test, *p < 0.05, ***p < 0.001.
Figure 2Example MR images from Study 1 (A,B) and Study 2 (C,D) of a control and mTBI rat 1-day post injury. (A,B) High-resolution T2w RARE images (TR/TE= 4,000/16, RARE factor=8, voxel resolution= 0.1 × 0.1 × 1 mm). (C,D) T1w GEFC images (TE = 2.6 ms, TR = 18 ms, voxel resolution = 0.2 × 0.2 × 0.2 mm). Enlargement of the superior sagittal sinus (SSS) is readily apparent. The LTS and RTS appear larger in mTBI vs. sham rats in Study 1 (A,B). The LTS and RTS were not analyzed in Study 2 due to lower resolution.
Figure 3Sinus volumes and areas of rats 1-day post injury from Study 1. Data were obtained from T2w MRI. Volumes were calculated from 10 mm of consecutive slices. Cross-sectional areas were calculated as an average from 3 consecutive slices. (A) Superior sagittal sinus (SSS) volume, (B) SSS area. (C) Left transverse sinus (TS) area. (D) Right TS area. (mean±SD; sham n = 5; mTBI n = 12). Comparisons were done with a students t-test, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.
Figure 4Superior sagittal sinus (SSS) volumes of rats from Study 2. Data were obtained from T1w Gadolinium enhanced MRI. Volumes were calculated from 10 mm of consecutive slices. Comparisons were done with a two-way ANOVA followed by Tukey post-hoc. Rats were imaged either 1 day post injury (mean±SD; Sham 1D n = 6; mTBI 1D n = 7) or 2 weeks post injury (mean±SD; Sham 2W n = 7; mTBI 2W n = 7). No significant interaction was found between the mTBI/sham group and time point (p = 0.19, F = 1.8). There was a significant difference between mTBI and sham rats (p = 0.005, F = 9.8) and no significant differences between 1 day and 2 week rats (p = 0.31, F = 1.1). SSS volume was significantly increased for 1-day mTBI rats compared to the 1-day (p = 0.030) and 2-week (p = 0.038) sham rats. No significant differences for 2-week mTBI rats compared to 2-week sham rats (p = 0.66) or 1-day mTBI rats (p = 0.33). *p < 0.05.