Longitudinal abnormalities in white matter extracellular free water volume fraction and neuropsychological functioning in patients with traumatic brain injury
James J Gugger, Alexa E Walter, Drew Parker, Nishant Sinha, Justin, Morrison, Jeffrey Ware, Andrea LC Schneider, Dmitriy Petrov, Danielle K, Sandsmark, Ragini Verma, Ramon Diaz-Arrastia

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between white matter extracellular free water volume and neuropsychological outcomes in traumatic brain injury patients, highlighting potential biomarkers for brain pathology and recovery prognosis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel neuroimaging biomarker, the summary anomaly score for free water volume, linked to neuropsychological functioning in TBI patients over time.
Findings
Higher free water volume in white matter of TBI patients compared to controls.
Correlation between free water anomalies and neuropsychological deficits in the subacute phase.
Potential of free water volume as a noninvasive biomarker for TBI pathology.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury is a global public health problem associated with chronic neurological complications and long-term disability. Biomarkers that map onto the underlying brain pathology driving these complications are urgently needed to identify individuals at risk for poor recovery and to inform design of clinical trials of neuroprotective therapies. Neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration are two endophenotypes associated with increases in brain extracellular water content after trauma. The objective of this study was to describe the relationship between a neuroimaging biomarker of extracellular free water content and the clinical features of patients with traumatic brain injury. We analyzed a cohort of 64 adult patients requiring hospitalization for non-penetrating traumatic brain injury of all severities as well as 32 healthy controls. Patients underwent brain MRI and clinical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances · Traumatic Brain Injury Research · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology
