Quantitive imaging in late traumatic brain injury. Part I: late imaging parameters in closed and penetrating head injuries

Objective : To ascertain the value of relatively simple quantitative radiologic measurements after head injury. Despite major advances in neuroradiology, analysis and reporting of imaging studies is based primarily on individual subjective and local experience, rather than on reproducible, standardi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain injury 2002-06, Vol.16 (6), p.517-525
Hauptverfasser: Reider-Groswasser, Irith I., Groswasser, Zeev, Ommaya, Alexander K., Schwab, Karen, Pridgen, Anthony, Brown, Herbert R., Cole, Reginald, Salazar, Andres M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective : To ascertain the value of relatively simple quantitative radiologic measurements after head injury. Despite major advances in neuroradiology, analysis and reporting of imaging studies is based primarily on individual subjective and local experience, rather than on reproducible, standardized parameters; reliance on newer technologies can improve care, but also raises diagnostic costs. Design : Blinded, retrospective, quantitative assessment of computerized tomography studies done some 14 years post-injury. Outcome measures : Frontal horn width (FHW); septum-caudate distance (SCD); temporal horn width (THW); interuncal distance (IUD); third ventricle width (3VW); ventricular score (VS); sulcal width (SW); gray-white matter discriminability (GWMD) and subjective assessment of atrophy (SAOA). Results : Diffuse and frontal damage was noted in both closed (CHI) and penetrating (PHI) head injury groups. Enlargement of frontal lobe parameters (septum caudate distance and frontal horn width suggest frontal injury in both closed and penetrating traumatic brain injury (TBI). Temporal horn width and inter-uncal distance were related to VS, 3VW and FHW in closed, but not in penetrating head injury. Conclusions : Simple linear CSF space measurements are correlated with volumetric and parenchymal measures, and can represent valuable and reliable low-cost quantitative measures of long term brain damage after TBI.
ISSN:0269-9052
1362-301X
DOI:10.1080/02699050110119141