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Allen H. Maniker, MD, is an associate professor
of neurological surgery at UMDNJ New Jersey Medical
School. |
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Frank G. Hillary, PhD, is a research scientist and
coordinator of Functional Imaging Research at Kessler
Medical Rehabilitation Research and Education Corporation. |
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Using MRS to
Predict Emergence from Coma State after Traumatic Brain
Injury
by Allen
Maniker, MD and Frank Hillary, MD
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this article as an Adobe PDF (114KB)
This research utilizes magnetic resonance spectroscopy
(MRS) to measure brain metabolites after traumatic brain
injury (TBI). These metabolites have been shown to have
predictive value in emergence from coma state. Tracking
metabolites offers the potential for advancing the treatment
of TBI and providing further understanding of which
individuals may or may not make good functional and
cognitive recovery after injury. This research will
better refine the protocols utilizing MRS to study these
metabolites and help to define their predictive value
for the treatment of injured patients.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been defined as an
injury to the brain resulting from an external mechanical
force, which may lead to significant impairment in the
individual’s physical, cognitive, and psychosocial
functioning. These types of injuries may occur as a
result of automobile accidents, falls, sports related
incidents, and assaults. Each year one million people
are treated and released from hospital emergency rooms,
230,000 of these individuals are hospitalized and survive,
and 50,000 fatalities occur because of traumatic brain
injury. As a result, a large number of individuals with
TBI endure life-long impairment and disability. The
impact on our society from healthcare costs and lost
wages ranges into the billions of dollars.
During the early moments of hospitalization following
TBI the patient is stabilized and the head is scanned
using computed tomography (CT). Injury severity is rated
using scales such as the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) which
assesses and combines into a single numeric score eye
opening, verbal response and motor response. The scale
ranges from 3 to 15, and gives a consistent thumbnail
picture of the severity of the injury and what level
of survival can be expected. This scale, in combination
with a neurological examination and CT scan, is used
to make operative and medical intervention decisions
in the early period immediately post TBI. Operative
evacuation of epidural or subdural hematomas or even
of irreversibly damaged, contused brain is frequently
undertaken within the first hours of a patient’s
arrival in the Emergency Department.
A monitor inserted into the parenchyma of the brain
allows the tracking of intracranial pressure (ICP),
which, if elevated, may result in damage to potentially
salvageable brain tissue. Subsequently, in the immediate
post admission phase, control of ICP and another important
indicator, cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP), are monitored
closely. Maintenance of appropriate blood pressure,
electrolyte balance, blood gasses, fluid intake, and
seizure prophylaxis are also among the mainstays of
the acute care of the TBI patient.
These interventions allow for improved chances of
the patients’ survival. However, this care still
cannot ensure the patients’ functional or cognitive
recovery. The question of who will recover to resume
a normal functioning life is much more problematic and
variable than the ability to predict survival.
Recovery from TBI has traditionally been monitored
by scales that measure gross behavioral changes such
as the GCS or the Galveston Orientation and Amnesia
Test (GOAT). While the GCS serves a critical function
at the time of hospital admission and during early treatment,
it remains a more accurate predictor of outcome for
patients with scores at the extremes and a weak predictor
of outcome for patients who achieve mid-range scores.
Thus, the GCS has limited predictive power for acute
recovery and more longterm functional and cognitive
outcome. While behavioral measures such as the duration
of post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) assessed with the GOAT
have shown superiority to the GCS as an indicator of
TBI severity, they only provide information ex post
facto and, therefore, remain undetermined for days to
weeks following injury. Similarly, traditional neuroimaging
techniques such as CT or MRI have shown limited correlation
with functional and cognitive outcome.
Advances in neuroimaging have provided researchers
with an important tool for the correlation of the pathophysiology
of brain dysfunction following TBI to the emergence
from coma states. One such advanced imaging method is
MRS. MRS is based on the same basic physical principles
employed in conventional MR sequences; however, its
signal is not derived simply from water or lipid as
in conventional MR imaging. Signals arising in MRS are
produced by hydrogen nuclei in larger macromolecules
with distinct local magnetic environments. The MRS signal
is typically displayed as a spectrum of waves. Put simply,
nuclei with a higher number of electrons subtract from
the MR field and result in a lower peak in the spectrum.
Thus, each measurement of nuclei maintain discrete orientations
when placed within the MR field and can be localized
and quantified. The primary signals of interest in MRS
arise from N-acetylaspartate (NAA), creatine/phosphocreatine
(Cre), choline-containing compounds (Cho), glutamate
(Glu), and lactate (Lac), and studies in TBI have primarily
examined alterations in NAA and Cho concentrations.
MRS has received considerable attention in the study
of TBI for both humans and animals during the past three
to four years. Studies in animals have revealed both
an acute decline in NAA concentration and increases
in concentration of choline. In fact, NAA decline has
been noted within an hour of injury and this change
has been noted to maintain “high sensitivity”
to physiological changes that accompany diffuse axonal
injury.
Following traumatic brain injury, neuronal damage has
traditionally been described in terms of primary injury
(e.g.,contusion or axonal shearing) and of secondary
injury (e.g., hyperglycolysis, acidosis). Prevention
of hyperglycolysis has been a focus of study in both
animal and human models of brain injury. Hyperglycolysis
occurs when Glu or other excitatory neurochemicals are
released into the intercellular space, resulting in
excessive neuroexcitation in the absence of functional
oxygen metabolism. Following TBI, hyperglycolysis may
occur within hours of the injury, resulting in acidosis
and cell death and, in animal models, acute elevations
in Glu have been shown to last for seven to nine days
following TBI. Therefore, Glu, an excitatory amino acid,
has been implicated in exacerbating primary TBI and
its effect may last for more than one week following
the injury. MRS can track the changes in Glu concentration
and its influence on brain injury severity. In addition
to the study of Glu, reductions in NAA have been correlated
with brain injury in both animals and humans. NAA is
found only in the central nervous system and is the
second most abundant compound in the brain (only Glu
is more abundant). Because NAA is thought to be related
to catabolic activity and axonal repair, its relationship
to brain injury has been widely studied. Animal studies
have shown NAA reductions following TBI as early as
one hour post injury and examination of metabolism in
humans has revealed that NAA depression may continue
for months prior to metabolic rebound. The Cho peak
has also been shown to be elevated in cases of local
tissue breakdown or repair or in the case of tissue
inflammation for weeks following injury. Thus, decline
in NAA and elevations in Cho are considered reliable
markers at the level of the brain substrate representative
of TBI. Therefore measuring NAA, Cho, and Glu following
TBI provides investigators with the unique opportunity
to monitor acute changes at the brain level that coincide
with behavioral changes observed during recovery.
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Figure reveals MRS values for a patient with very
severe head trauma at two separate time points (Day
9 and Day 25). Note diminished NAA concentrations
and elevated Cho indicating significant brain damage.
In addition, lactate is the highest peak at Day
9, with reductions by Day 25. Lactate elevations
coincided with reductions in ICP, which may be indicative
of an ischemic process. |
While MRS has shown great promise in predicting brain
injury severity and patient outcome, the exact protocols
for using MRS with TBI remain undetermined. The purpose
of this research is to examine three critical areas:
1.) when in the post-injury time period MRS data should
be acquired (e.g., within one week of injury, within
one month of injury) for gathering optimal predictive
data; 2.) how metabolites should be measured (i.e.,
absolute concentrations or changes in concentration
over time); and 3.) brain locations best suited for
MRS data acquisition (i.e., acquisition near lesion
sites or acquisition at sites remote from probable brain
lesion). In humans, MRS has now been applied to the
study of both acute and chronic TBI and there is evidence
of significant correlation with injury severity and
cognitive outcome. This research will provide further
insight into the uses of MRS and the treatment of traumatic
brain injury.
Allen H. Maniker, MD, is an associate professor
of neurological surgery at UMDNJ New Jersey Medical
School. He is also the director of neurotrauma at UMDNJ-University
Hospital. Dr. Maniker attended medical school at Wayne
State University in Detroit, Michigan and completed
his residency training in neurological surgery at UMDNJ.
He completed his fellowship training in neurotrauma
at the Medical College of Virginia.
Frank G. Hillary, PhD, is a research scientist
and coordinator of Functional Imaging Research at Kessler
Medical Rehabilitation Research and Education Corporation.
He received a BA in psychology from the University of
Michigan and a PhD in clinical neuropsychology from
Drexel University. Dr. Hillary completed a post-doctoral
fellowship in neuropsychology at the Kessler Medical
Rehabilitation Research and Education Corporation.
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