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Current and prospective roles of magnetic resonance imaging in mild traumatic brain injury

Sassani, Matilde; Ghafari, Tara; Arachchige, Pradeepa R W; Idrees, Iman; Gao, Yidian; Waitt, Alice; Weaver, Samuel R C; Mazaheri, Ali; Lyons, Hannah S; Grech, Olivia; Thaller, Mark; Witton, Caroline; Bagshaw, Andrew P; Wilson, Martin; Park, Hyojin; Brookes, Matthew; Novak, Jan; Mollan, Susan P; Hill, Lisa J; Lucas, Samuel J E; Mitchell, James L; the UK mTBI Predict Consortium; Sinclair, Alexandra J; Finch, Aliza; Hampshire, Adam; Sitch, Alice; Mazaheri, Ali; Bagshaw, Andrew P; Strom, Asha; Waitt, Alice; Yiangou, Andreas; Bennett, Alexander; Hunter, Angus; Witton, Caroline; Fernández-Espejo, Davinia; Ford, Dan; Wilson, Duncan; Dehghani, Hamid; Park, Hyojin; Lyons, Hannah S; Brunger, Helen; Ellis, Henrietta; Idrees, Iman; Varley, Ian; Hubbard, Jessica; Cao, Jun; Deeks, Jon; Mitchell, James L; Novak, Jan; Pringle, Jamie; Terry, John; Rogers, Jack; Fildes, Jessikah; Mullinger, Karen; Hill, Lisa J; Thaller, Mark; Wilson, Martin; Sassani, Matilde; Brookes, Matthew; Jenkinson, Ned; Jensen, Ol...

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Authors

Matilde Sassani

Tara Ghafari

Pradeepa R W Arachchige

Iman Idrees

Yidian Gao

Alice Waitt

Samuel R C Weaver

Ali Mazaheri

Hannah S Lyons

Olivia Grech

Mark Thaller

Caroline Witton

Andrew P Bagshaw

Martin Wilson

Hyojin Park

Jan Novak

Susan P Mollan

Lisa J Hill

Samuel J E Lucas

James L Mitchell

the UK mTBI Predict Consortium

Alexandra J Sinclair

Aliza Finch

Adam Hampshire

Alice Sitch

Ali Mazaheri

Andrew P Bagshaw

Asha Strom

Alice Waitt

Andreas Yiangou

Alexander Bennett

Angus Hunter

Caroline Witton

Davinia Fernández-Espejo

Duncan Wilson

Hamid Dehghani

Hyojin Park

Hannah S Lyons

Helen Brunger

Henrietta Ellis

Iman Idrees

Ian Varley

Jessica Hubbard

Jun Cao

Jon Deeks

James L Mitchell

Jan Novak

Jamie Pringle

John Terry

Jack Rogers

Lisa J Hill

Mark Thaller

Martin Wilson

Matilde Sassani

Ned Jenkinson

Ole Jensen

Pete Hellyer

Sebastian Coleman

Raymond Reynolds

Richard Blanch

Katie Morris

Ryan Ottridge

Rachel Upthegrove

Pradeepa R W Arachchige

Sarah Berhane

Samuel J E Lucas

Sophie Prosser

Shreshth Dharm-Datta

Tara Ghafari

Waheeda Hawa

Yidian Gao

Alexandra J Sinclair

Davinia Fernández-Espejo



Abstract

There is unmet clinical need for biomarkers to predict recovery or the development of long-term sequelae of mild traumatic brain injury, a highly prevalent condition causing a constellation of disabling symptoms. A substantial proportion of patients live with long-lasting sequelae affecting their quality of life and ability to work. At present, symptoms can be assessed through clinical tests, however, there are no imaging or laboratory tests fully reflective of pathophysiology routinely used by clinicians to characterise post-concussive symptoms. Magnetic resonance imaging has potential to link subtle pathophysiological alterations to clinical outcomes. Here, we review the state-of-the-art of MRI research in adults with mild traumatic brain injury and provide recommendations to facilitate transition into clinical practice. Studies utilising MRI can inform on pathophysiology of mild traumatic brain injury. They suggest presence of early cytotoxic and vasogenic oedema. They also show that mild traumatic brain injury results into cellular injury and microbleeds affecting the integrity of myelin and white matter tracts, all processes which appear to induce delayed vascular reactions and functional changes. Crucially, correlates between MRI parameters and post-concussive symptoms are emerging. Clinical sequences such as T1-weighted MRI, susceptibility-weighted MRI or fluid attenuation inversion recovery could be easily implementable in clinical practice, but are not sufficient, in isolation for prognostication. Diffusion sequences have shown promises and, although in need of analysis standardisation, are a research priority. Lastly, arterial spin labelling is emerging as a high utility research as it could become useful to assess delayed neurovascular response and possible long-term symptoms.

Citation

Sassani, M., Ghafari, T., Arachchige, P. R. W., Idrees, I., Gao, Y., Waitt, A., Weaver, S. R. C., Mazaheri, A., Lyons, H. S., Grech, O., Thaller, M., Witton, C., Bagshaw, A. P., Wilson, M., Park, H., Brookes, M., Novak, J., Mollan, S. P., Hill, L. J., Lucas, S. J. E., …Fernández-Espejo, D. (in press). Current and prospective roles of magnetic resonance imaging in mild traumatic brain injury. Brain Communications, https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaf120

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 24, 2025
Online Publication Date Mar 25, 2025
Deposit Date Apr 11, 2025
Publicly Available Date Apr 11, 2025
Journal Brain Communications
Electronic ISSN 2632-1297
Publisher Oxford University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaf120
Keywords Mild traumatic brain injury, concussion, biomarkers, magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/47260711
Publisher URL https://academic.oup.com/braincomms/advance-article/doi/10.1093/braincomms/fcaf120/8093004?login=false

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