ADVANCED MRI IN ACUTE MILITARY TBI
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Traumatic Brain Injury
- Sponsor
- Washington University School of Medicine
- Enrollment
- 400
- Locations
- 2
- Primary Endpoint
- Cognitive dysfunction
- Last Updated
- 11 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Traumatic brain injury can cause permanent problems with thinking, memory, control of emotions, organization and planning. Thousands of soldiers, marines, and other military personnel have had injuries to the brain due the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Very large numbers of civilians, up to perhaps 1.5 million people per year, in the United States also have traumatic brain injuries caused by car accidents, falls, sports-related injuries or assault.
We don't know very much about traumatic brain injuries right now, but there are some important new advances in technology that may help us learn a lot more about these injuries. One such advance involves new types of MRI scans that we think will be able to show what has happened to the brain after trauma more clearly that regular scans can. The first new scan is called diffusion tensor imaging, which shows injury to the axons (the wiring of the brain). The second new scan is called resting-state functional MRI correlation analysis, which shows how well various parts of the brain are connected to each other. Importantly, the new types of scans can be done using regular scanners that we already have in every major hospital. The innovation is entirely in how the scanners are used and how the resulting pictures are analyzed on a computer after they have been taken. We have already tested these scans on some military and civilian patients with brain injury and found them to be very helpful so far. Our overall goal is to see whether these new MRI scans will be useful for active duty military personnel who have had recent traumatic brain injuries. The most important goal will be to see if the amount of injury shown on the scans be used to predict how well the patients will do overall over the next 6-12 months. A related goal will be to see whether injuries to specific parts of the brain seen by these new scans can be used to predict whether patients will be likely to have specific problems like memory loss, attention deficit, depression, or post-traumatic stress disorder. We would also like to see whether the scans could be even more useful when combined with information about genetic factors (inherited from the parents) that can be tested in the blood. Another important goal is to compare the effects of traumatic brain injuries caused by blasts or explosions with injuries from other causes, to find out what is unique about blast injury. A final goal will be to repeat the scans 6-12 months later to see whether the new MRI scans can show whether the injuries to the brain have healed, gotten worse, or stayed the same. These new scans could help with decisions about whether military personnel can return to duty, what sort of rehabilitation and treatment would benefit them most, and what family members should watch for and expect.
Investigators
David Brody, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of Neurology
Washington University School of Medicine
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Clinical diagnosis of blast-related TBI of any severity, as made by the LRMC TBI screening team, based on clinical history, examination, and/or clinical imaging performed as part of standard care (CT, conventional MRI). This includes participants with both primary blast and additional mechanisms of injury ("blast-plus" injury)
- •Acute injury or injuries, defined as first occurring 0-30 days prior to enrollment.
- •Ability to provide informed consent.
- •Ability to lie still in a supine position for the duration of the scan sessions, e.g. no severe claustrophobia or limiting pain from other injuries.
Exclusion Criteria
- •known metallic implants or metallic foreign objects.
- •known to be HIV positive
- •known to be pregnant
- •previous major traumatic brain injury
- •contraindication to MRI for medical reasons such as arrhythmias
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Cognitive dysfunction
Time Frame: 6-12 months after injury
Assessed by neuropsychological testing
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Time Frame: 6-12 months after injury
Assessed using structured clinical interviews
Secondary Outcomes
- Neurological deficits(6-12 months after injury)
- Depression(6-12 months after injury)