Summary
Introduction
Previous studies have shown that edema formation after diffuse traumatic brain injury (TBI) with secondary insult is cytotoxic and not vasogenic. This assumption is based on observations of reduced apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and lack of significant accumulation of intravascular tracer in brain tissue. However, ADC reduction does not exclude vasogenic edema, and intravascular tracer can only accumulate when it reaches the tissue and is not perfusion limited. This study aims to confirm tissue delivery of intravascular tracer and lack of BBB opening during a phase of rapid brain swelling after diffuse TBI.
Methods
Rats were exposed to either TBI using the impact acceleration model combined with 30 minutes of hypoxia and hypotension, or sham injury. At 2 or 4 hours after injury, ADC and tissue water content were assessed using MRI. Gd-DTPA was given followed by a combination of rapid T2 imaging (60 seconds) and T1 imaging (30 minutes). Signal intensity changes were analyzed to determine a bolus effect (dynamic susceptibility contrast) and longer term tissue accumulation of Gd-DTPA.
Results
Mean increase in cortical water content on the left was 0.8% at 2 hours, 2.1% at 4 hours; on the right it was 0.5% at 2 hours and 1.7% at 4 hours (p<0.05). Mean ADC reduction over 4 hours was 0.04 × 10−3 mm2/s on the left and 0.06 × 10−3 mm2/s on the right. Kinetic analysis of signal intensity changes after Gd-DTPA showed no significant difference in inward transfer coefficient (BBB permeability) between sham injury and 2 or 4 hours post-injury. T2 imaging showed consistent tissue delivery of a bolus of Gd-DTPA to the tissue at 2 and 4 hours post-injury, comparable to sham animals.
Conclusions
Progressive cerebral edema formation after diffuse TBI occurred during ADC reduction and without continued BBB permeability. Tissue delivery of Gd-DTPA was confirmed, verifying that lack of tracer accumulation is due to an intact BBB and not to limited perfusion.
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© 2006 Springer-Verlag
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Beaumont, A., Fatouros, P., Gennarelli, T., Corwin, F., Marmarou, A. (2006). Bolus tracer delivery measured by MRI confirms edema without blood-brain barrier permeability in diffuse traumatic brain injury. In: Hoff, J.T., Keep, R.F., Xi, G., Hua, Y. (eds) Brain Edema XIII. Acta Neurochirurgica Supplementum, vol 96. Springer, Vienna. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-211-30714-1_38
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-211-30714-1_38
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