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Article

Acute thalamic connectivity precedes chronic post-concussive symptoms in mild traumatic brain injury

Details

Citation

Woodrow RE, Winzeck S, Luppi A, Kelleher-Unger IR, Spindler LRB, Wilson JTL, Newcombe VFJ, Coles JP, Menon DK & Stamatakis EA (2023) Acute thalamic connectivity precedes chronic post-concussive symptoms in mild traumatic brain injury. Brain, 146 (8). https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awad056

Abstract
Chronic post-concussive symptoms are common after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and are difficult to predict or treat. Thalamic functional integrity is particularly vulnerable in mTBI and may be related to long-term outcomes but requires further investigation. We compared structural MRI and resting state functional MRI in 108 patients with a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) of 13-15 and normal CT, and 76 controls. We examined whether acute changes in thalamic functional connectivity were early markers for persistent symptoms and explored neurochemical associations of our findings using PET data. Of the mTBI cohort, 47% showed incomplete recovery 6 months post-injury. Despite the absence of structural changes, we found acute thalamic hyperconnectivity in mTBI, with specific vulnerabilities of individual thalamic nuclei. Acute fMRI markers differentiated those with chronic post-concussive symptoms, with time- and outcome-dependent relationships in a sub-cohort followed longitudinally. Moreover, emotional and cognitive symptoms were associated with changes in thalamic functional connectivity to known serotonergic and noradrenergic targets, respectively. Our findings suggest that chronic symptoms can have a basis in early thalamic pathophysiology. This may aid identification of patients at risk of chronic post-concussive symptoms following mTBI, provide a basis for development of new therapies and facilitate precision medicine application of these therapies.

Keywords
thalamus; mild traumatic brain injury; functional connectivity; postconcussive symptoms; resting-state fMRI

Journal
Brain: Volume 146, Issue 8

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/08/2023
Publication date online28/02/2023
Date accepted by journal03/02/2023
ISSN0006-8950
eISSN1460-2156

People (1)

Professor Lindsay Wilson

Professor Lindsay Wilson

Emeritus Professor, Psychology