Cerebral microhaemorrhage count is related to processing speed, but not level of symptom reporting, independently of age, psychological status and premorbid functioning, after first-ever mild traumatic brain injury.
Jacqueline F I AndersonLana HigsonMichelle H WuMarc L SealJoseph Yuan-Mou YangPublished in: Brain imaging and behavior (2023)
Cerebral microhaemorrhage is a commonly identified neuropathological consequence of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and can be identified in vivo using susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI). This study aimed to determine whether SWI-detected microhaemorrhages are more common in individuals after a single, first-ever, mTBI event relative to trauma controls (TC) and to investigate whether a linear relationship exists between microhaemorrhage numbers and cognition or symptom reporting in the post-acute period after injury, independently of age, psychological status and premorbid level of functioning. Microhaemorrhagic lesions were identified by expert clinical examination of SWI for 78 premorbidly healthy adult participants who were admitted to hospital after a traumatic injury and had suffered a first-ever mTBI (n = 47) or no head strike (n = 31). Participants underwent objective cognitive examination of processing speed, attention, memory, and executive function as well as self-reported post-concussion symptomatology. Bootstrapping analyses were used as data were not normally distributed. Analyses revealed that the mTBI group had significantly more microhaemorrhages than the TC group (Cohen's d = 0.559). These lesions were only evident in 28% of individuals. The mTBI participants demonstrated a significant linear association between number of microhaemorrhages and processing speed, independently of age, psychological status, or premorbid level of functioning. This study shows that a single mTBI causes cerebral microhaemorrhages to occur in a minority of premorbidly healthy individuals. Greater microhaemorrhage count is independently associated with slower processing speed, but not symptom reporting, during the post-acute injury period.
Keyphrases
- mild traumatic brain injury
- adverse drug
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- liver failure
- working memory
- spinal cord injury
- high resolution
- respiratory failure
- magnetic resonance
- drug induced
- emergency department
- machine learning
- intensive care unit
- patient reported
- big data
- multiple sclerosis
- hepatitis b virus
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- photodynamic therapy