Title:Imaging of Neurotrauma in Acute and Chronic Settings
Volume: 19
Issue: 8
Author(s): Shane Mallon, Jacek M. Kwiecien and John P. Karis*
Affiliation:
- Department of Neuroradiology, Barrow Neurological Institute, St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center, Phoenix, Arizona,United States
Keywords:
Diffuse axonal injury, neuroradiology, radiology, spinal cord injury, traumatic axonal injury, traumatic brain injury.
Abstract: Traumatic injuries of the brain and spinal cord are a significant source of mortality and
long-term disability. A recent systematic study in a rat model of spinal cord injury (SCI) indicates
severe, destructive, and very protracted inflammation as the key mechanism initiated by the massive
injury involving the white matter. Although the severe inflammation is localized and counteracted
by astrogliosis, it has a damaging effect on the blood vessels in the surrounding spinal cord, leading
to persistent vasogenic edema. Evaluation of these injuries with imaging of the brain and spinal
cord plays a crucial role in the acute trauma work-up, allowing clinicians to quickly identify abnormalities
that require immediate medical or surgical intervention or to exclude them from the workup.
Recently, anti-inflammatory agents have been shown to inhibit and accelerate the elimination of
post-SCI inflammation in preclinical studies, and an exciting potential has arisen for the use of antiinflammatory
drugs in clinical studies to achieve neuroprotection (i.e., inhibition of destruction
caused by inflammation) and to inhibit vasogenic edema in SCI, traumatic brain injury, and stroke.
In both subacute and chronic settings, imaging can guide therapy and provide important prognostic
information. In this review, we discuss the imaging workup and evolving imaging findings of neurotrauma
in the acute and chronic setting, including conventional and advanced imaging techniques.
As neuroimaging is the primary mode of diagnostic analysis in neurotrauma, it is a critical component
in future clinical trials evaluating neuroprotective therapies.