Older age, male sex, and cerebral microbleeds predict white matter loss after traumatic brain injury

Geroscience. 2022 Feb;44(1):83-102. doi: 10.1007/s11357-021-00459-2. Epub 2021 Oct 26.

Abstract

Little is known on how mild traumatic brain injury affects white matter based on age at injury, sex, cerebral microbleeds, and time since injury. Here, we study the fractional anisotropy of white matter to study these effects in 109 participants aged 18-77 (46 females, age μ ± σ = 40 ± 17 years) imaged within [Formula: see text] 1 week and [Formula: see text] 6 months post-injury. Age is found to be linearly associated with white matter degradation, likely due not only to injury but also to cumulative effects of other pathologies and to their interactions with injury. Age is associated with mean anisotropy decreases in the corpus callosum, middle longitudinal fasciculi, inferior longitudinal and occipitofrontal fasciculi, and superficial frontal and temporal fasciculi. Over [Formula: see text] 6 months, the mean anisotropies of the corpus callosum, left superficial frontal fasciculi, and left corticospinal tract decrease significantly. Independently of other predictors, age and cerebral microbleeds contribute to anisotropy decrease in the callosal genu. Chronically, the white matter of commissural tracts, left superficial frontal fasciculi, and left corticospinal tract degrade appreciably, independently of other predictors. Our findings suggest that large commissural and intra-hemispheric structures are at high risk for post-traumatic degradation. This study identifies detailed neuroanatomic substrates consistent with brain injury patients' age-dependent deficits in information processing speed, interhemispheric communication, motor coordination, visual acuity, sensory integration, reading speed/comprehension, executive function, personality, and memory. We also identify neuroanatomic features underlying white matter degradation whose severity is associated with the male sex. Future studies should compare our findings to functional measures and other neurodegenerative processes.

Keywords: Diffusion tensor imaging; Executive function; Fractional anisotropy; Sensory integration; Susceptibility-weighted imaging.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Brain Injuries, Traumatic* / complications
  • Brain Injuries, Traumatic* / diagnostic imaging
  • Brain Injuries, Traumatic* / pathology
  • Cerebral Hemorrhage / pathology
  • Corpus Callosum / diagnostic imaging
  • Corpus Callosum / pathology
  • Diffusion Tensor Imaging
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • White Matter* / diagnostic imaging