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Journal Article

Citation

Avesta A, Yendiki A, Perlbarg V, Velly L, Khalilzadeh O, Puybasset L, Galanaud D, Gupta R. J. Comput. Assist. Tomogr. 2022; 46(2): 236-243.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/RCT.0000000000001284

PMID

35297580

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to assess if quantitative diffusion magnetic resonance imaging analysis would improve prognostication of individual patients with severe traumatic brain injury.

METHODS: We analyzed images of 30 healthy controls to extract normal fractional anisotropy ranges along 18 white-matter tracts. Then, we analyzed images of 33 patients, compared their fractional anisotropy values with normal ranges extracted from controls, and computed severity of injury to white-matter tracts. We also asked 2 neuroradiologists to rate severity of injury to different brain regions on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery and susceptibility-weighted imaging. Finally, we built 3 models: (1) fed with neuroradiologists' ratings, (2) fed with white-matter injury measures, and (3) fed with both input types.

RESULTS: The 3 models respectively predicted survival at 1 year with accuracies of 70%, 73%, and 88%. The accuracy with both input types was significantly better (P < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: Quantifying severity of injury to white-matter tracts complements qualitative imaging findings and improves outcome prediction in severe traumatic brain injury.


Language: en

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