Open Access
A fixel‐based analysis of micro‐ and macro‐structural changes to white matter following adult traumatic brain injury
Author(s) -
Wallace Erica J.,
Mathias Jane L.,
Ward Lynn,
Fripp Jurgen,
Rose Stephen,
Pannek Kerstin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
human brain mapping
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.005
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0193
pISSN - 1065-9471
DOI - 10.1002/hbm.24939
Subject(s) - traumatic brain injury , diffusion mri , white matter , corpus callosum , internal capsule , magnetic resonance imaging , medicine , voxel , fractional anisotropy , tractography , psychology , pathology , radiology , psychiatry
Abstract Diffusion tensor imaging is often used to assess white matter (WM) changes following traumatic brain injury (TBI), but is limited in voxels that contain multiple fibre tracts. Fixel‐based analysis (FBA) addresses this limitation by using a novel method of analysing high angular resolution diffusion‐weighted imaging (HARDI) data. FBA examines three aspects of each fibre tract within a voxel: tissue micro‐structure (fibre density [FD]), tissue macro‐structure (fibre‐bundle cross section [FC]) and a combined measure of both (FD and fibre‐bundle cross section [FDC]). This study used FBA to identify the location and extent of micro‐ and macro‐structural changes in WM following TBI. A large TBI sample ( N mild = 133, N moderate–severe = 29) and control group (healthy and orthopaedic; N = 107) underwent magnetic resonance imaging with HARDI and completed reaction time tasks approximately 7 months after their injury (range: 98–338 days). The TBI group showed micro‐structural differences (lower FD) in the corpus callosum and forceps minor, compared to controls. Subgroup analyses revealed that the mild TBI group did not differ from controls on any fixel metric, but the moderate to severe TBI group had significantly lower FD, FC and FDC in multiple WM tracts, including the corpus callosum, cerebral peduncle, internal and external capsule. The moderate to severe TBI group also had significantly slower reaction times than controls, but the mild TBI group did not. Reaction time was not related to fixel findings. Thus, the WM damage caused by moderate to severe TBI manifested as fewer axons and a reduction in the cross‐sectional area of key WM tracts.