A one year longitudinal study of cortical myelination changes following pediatric mild traumatic brain injury
Jessica R. McQuaid, Tracey V. Wick, Josef Ling, Andrew B. Dodd, Divyasree Sasi Kumar, Upasana Nathaniel, Samuel D. Miller, Vadim Zotev, Harm J. van der Horn, John P. Phillips, Richard A. Campbell, Robert E. Sapien, Timothy B. Meier, Andrew R. Mayer

TL;DR
This study found that pediatric mild traumatic brain injury has little to no lasting effect on brain myelination, which is primarily influenced by age and hemisphere differences.
Contribution
The study provides longitudinal evidence that pmTBI does not significantly alter cortical myelination development.
Findings
Myelin content increased with age and showed stronger changes in the left hemisphere.
pmTBI showed temporary myelination changes, but these did not persist after sensitivity analyses.
Females had higher myelin content than males across the study.
Abstract
•Pediatric mild traumatic brain injury has little to no effect on myelination.•Developmental myelination has a strong correlation with age.•Changes in myelination were greater in the left relative to right hemisphere. Pediatric mild traumatic brain injury has little to no effect on myelination. Developmental myelination has a strong correlation with age. Changes in myelination were greater in the left relative to right hemisphere. The impact of pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI) on cortical (i.e., grey matter) myelination is not yet understood, especially for interactions with neurodevelopment. The current study examined the impact of pmTBI on cortical myelination relative to healthy controls (HC) by estimating myelin content using the T1w/T2w ratio method. Data were obtained from pmTBI (N = 217) participants at approximately 7 days (Visit 1 [V1]), 4 months (Visit 2…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury Research · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications
