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Journal Article

Citation

Shao M, Cao J, Bai L, Huang W, Wang S, Sun C, Gan S, Ye L, Yin B, Zhang D, Gu C, Hu L, Bai G, Yan Z. Front. Neurol. 2018; 9: e878.

Affiliation

Radiology Department of the Second Affiliated Hospital and Yuying Children's Hospital, Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Frontiers Research Foundation)

DOI

10.3389/fneur.2018.00878

PMID

30386291

PMCID

PMC6199374

Abstract

The main objective of this study was to evaluate sex differences in cortical thickness after acute mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and its associations with clinical outcomes. Thirty-two patients with mTBI at acute phase (2.4 ± 1.3 days post-injury) and 30 healthy controls were enrolled. All the participants underwent comprehensive neurocognitive assessments and MRI to assess cortical thickness. Significant sex differences were determined by using variance analysis of factorial design. Relations between the cortical thickness and clinical assessments were measured with the Spearman Correlation.

RESULTS revealed that patients with mTBI had significantly reduced cortical thickness in the left entorhinal cortex while increased cortical thickness in the left precuneus cortex and right lateral occipital cortex, compared with healthy controls. The interaction effect of the group × sex on cortical thickness was significant. Female patients had significant thicker cortical thickness in the left caudal anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) than male patients and had higher scores on Posttraumatic stress disorder Checklist-Civilian Version (PCL-C). Spearman correlational analysis showed a significantly positive correlations between the cortical thickness of the left caudal ACC and PCL-C ratings in female patients. Sex differences in cortical thickness support its potential as a neuroimaging phenotype for investigating the differences in clinical profiles of mild TBI between women and men.


Language: en

Keywords

clinical outcomes; cortical thickness; gender difference; interaction effect; mild traumatic brain injury

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