(Press-News.org) Hospital MRIs may be better at predicting long-term outcomes for people with mild traumatic brain injuries than CT scans, the standard technique for evaluating such injuries in the emergency room, according to a clinical trial led by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and the San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center (SFGH).
Published this month in the journal Annals of Neurology, the study was led by UCSF neuroradiologist Esther Yuh, MD, PhD and followed 135 people treated for mild traumatic brain injuries over the past two years at one of three urban hospitals with level-one trauma centers: SFGH, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and University Medical Center Brackenridge in Austin, Texas as part of a study called NIH-funded TRACK-TBI (Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury).
All 135 patients with mild traumatic brain injuries received CT scans when they were first admitted, and all were given MRIs about a week later. Most of them (99) had no detectable signs of injury on a CT scan, but more than a quarter (27/99) who had a "normal" CT scans also had detectable spots on their MRI scans called "focal lesions," which are signs of microscopic bleeding in the brain.
Spotting these focal lesions helped the doctors predict whether the patients were likely to suffer persistent neurological problems. About 15 percent of people who have mild traumatic brain injuries do suffer long-term neurological consequences, but doctors currently have no definitive way of predicting whether any one patient will or not.
"This work raises questions of how we're currently managing patients via CT scan," said senior author on the study Geoff Manley, MD, PhD, the chief of neurosurgery at SFGH and vice-chair of the Department of Neurological Surgery at UCSF. "Having a normal CT scan doesn't, in fact, say you're normal," he added.
Better Precision Tools Needed for Head Injuries, Doctors Say
At least 1.7 million Americans seek medical attention every year for acute head injuries, and three quarters of them have mild traumatic brain injuries – which generally do not involve skull fractures, comas or severe bleeding in the brain but have a variety of more mild symptoms, such as temporary loss of consciousness, vomiting or amnesia.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that far more mild traumatic brain injuries may occur each year in the United States but the true number is unknown because only injuries severe enough to bring someone to an emergency room are counted.
Most of those who do show up at emergency rooms are treated and released without being admitted to the hospital. In general, most people with mild traumatic brain injuries recover fully, but about one in six go on to develop persistent, sometimes permanent disability.
The problem, Manley said, is that there is no way to tell which patients are going to have the poor long-term outcomes. Some socioeconomic indicators can help predict prolonged disability, but until now there have been no proven imaging features, or blood tests for predicting how well or how fast a patient will recover. Nor is there a consensus on how to treat mild traumatic brain injuries.
"The treatment's all over the place—if you're getting treatment at all," Manley said.
The new work is an important step towards defining a more quantitative way of assessing patients with mild traumatic brain injuries and developing more precision medical tools to detect, monitor and treat them, he added.
If doctors knew which patients were at risk of greater disabilities, they could be followed more closely. Being able to identify patients at risk of long-term consequences would also speed the development of new therapeutics because it would allow doctors to identify patients who would benefit the most from treatment and improve their ability to test potential new drugs in clinical trials.
###
The article, "Magnetic Resonance Imaging Improves 3-Month Outcome Prediction in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury" by Esther l. Yuh, Pratik Mukherjee, Hester F. Lingsma, John K. Yue, Adam R. Ferguson, Wayne A. Gordon, Alex B. Valadka, David M. Schnyer, David O. Okonkwo, Andrew I. R. Maas, Geoffrey T. Manley and the TRACK-TBI Investigators was published online by the journal Annals of Neurology on December 7, 2012. See: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ana.23783
In addition to UCSF, authors on this study are affiliated with Erasmus MC-University Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York; Seton Brain and Spine Institute in Austin, TX; the University of Texas, Austin; the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center; and Antwerp University Hospital in Edegem, Belgium.
This work was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, one of the National Institutes of Health, through grant #NS069409.
UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.
Follow UCSF
UCSF.edu | Facebook.com/ucsf | Twitter.com/ucsf | YouTube.com/ucsf
MRIs reveal signs of brain injuries not seen in CT scans, UCSF/SFGH researchers report
Better diagnosis and prediction of outcomes from head injuries would help guide treatment and avoid re-injury
2012-12-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Penn metamaterials experts show a way to reduce electrons' effective mass to nearly 0
2012-12-19
PHILADELPHIA — The field of metamaterials involves augmenting materials with specially designed patterns, enabling those materials to manipulate electromagnetic waves and fields in previously impossible ways. Now, researchers from the University of Pennsylvania have come up with a theory for moving this phenomenon onto the quantum scale, laying out blueprints for materials where electrons have nearly zero effective mass.
Such materials could make for faster circuits with novel properties.
The work was conducted by Nader Engheta, the H. Nedwill Ramsey Professor of Electrical ...
Ozone levels have sizeable impact on worker productivity
2012-12-19
December 18, 2012 -- Researchers in the Department of Health Policy and Management at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health assessed the impact of pollution on agricultural worker productivity using daily variations in ozone levels. Their results show that ozone, even at levels below current air-quality standards in most parts of the world, has significant negative impacts on worker productivity. Their findings suggest that environmental protection is important for promoting economic growth and investing in human capital in contrast to its common portrayal as a tax ...
Analysis of Marcellus flowback finds high levels of ancient brines
2012-12-19
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- Brine water that flows back from gas wells in the Marcellus Shale region after hydraulic fracturing is many times more salty than seawater, with high contents of various elements, including radium and barium. The chemistry is consistent with brines formed during the Paleozoic era, a study by an undergraduate student and two professors in Penn State's Department of Geosciences found.
The study indicates that the brine flowback elements found in high levels in the late stages of hydraulic fracturing come from the ancient brines rather than from salts ...
Robotic-assisted radical bladder surgery potentially benefits bladder cancer patients
2012-12-19
New York, NY, December 19, 2012 – About 30 percent of the more than 70,000 bladder cancer cases expected in 2012 are muscle invasive. In such cases, radical cystectomy is the preferred treatment. In a pilot trial, a team of investigators assessed the efficacy of open radical cystectomy (ORC) vs. robotic-assisted laparoscopic radical cystectomy (RARC). While there were no significant differences in treatment outcomes, RARC resulted in decreased estimated blood loss and shorter hospital stay compared to ORC. The results are published in the February 2013 issue of The Journal ...
HIV patients in care lose more years of life to smoking than to HIV infection
2012-12-19
Among HIV patients receiving well-organized care with free access to antiretroviral therapy, those who smoke lose more years of life to smoking than to HIV, according to a Danish study published in Clinical Infectious Diseases and available online. The findings highlight the importance of smoking cessation efforts in the long-term, integrated care of patients infected with HIV.
Marie Helleberg, MD, of Copenhagen University Hospital and colleagues estimated the effect of smoking on mortality, risk of death, and life expectancy, and the number of life years lost to smoking ...
For power and status, dominance and skill trump likability
2012-12-19
Finding the next Barack Obama or Warren Buffett might be as simple as looking at who attracts the most eyes in a crowd, a new University of British Columbia study finds.
For the study, which used eye-tracking technology, participants who observed groups of strangers were able to accurately predict who would emerge as leader of the group in 120 seconds or less.
According to the study – to appear in the forthcoming Journal of Personality and Social Psychology – two sets of behaviours will accurately predict future leadership and catch people's attention. The first is ...
Global collaborative efforts help delineate pediatric TBI in China
2012-12-19
Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) among children in China are a growing public health concern. Two new studies by researchers of the International Program at the Center for Injury Research and Policy of The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital and the Wuhan Children's Hospital in China examined pediatric TBIs that were treated at Wuhan Children's Hospital from 2002 to 2011.
The first study, appearing in the December 2012 print issue of PLOS ONE, investigated the causes, characteristics and trends of pediatric TBIs in China and found that falls, struck by/against ...
Suppressing Evidence Could Dismiss Your Case
2012-12-19
The attorney representing a man accused of stabbing a man to death in an argument over $20 worth of marijuana earlier this year attempted to get some of the evidence tossed out before his client's trial.
A twenty-one-year old man in State College, Pennsylvania was accused of killing a 20-year-old man over $20 worth of marijuana in January 2012. The 21-year-old was charged with first-degree, second-degree and third-degree murder, as well as robbery and aggravated assault. Centre County prosecutors alleged that what started as two men arguing over the drugs ended in one ...
Where Will My Property go After I Die?
2012-12-19
Texans who are considering if they need a will should know what happens to their property if they die without one. This depends on a lot of factors and can involve a very complicated court process. Texas has laws in place to deal with property transfers after death, but people who have certain wishes for their property disposition may want to talk to an attorney about creating a will.
Separate property and community property for spouses
After people get married in Texas, they own two types of property. One is separate property, and the other is community property. ...
Implications of the Legalization of Recreational Marijuana in Colorado
2012-12-19
Residents of Boulder County and people throughout the nation now know that on Election Day 2012, Colorado residents voted in favor of Amendment 64, which legalizes the recreational use of marijuana. That vote will likely have important consequences not only related to the decriminalization of some uses of marijuana, but for the use of police resources as well.
Use of police resources for marijuana arrests
According to the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting, the police in the United States arrest someone for marijuana possession every 42 seconds. Of the 1.5 million drug ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Terahertz pulses induce chirality in a non-chiral crystal
AI judged to be more compassionate than expert crisis responders: Study
Scale-up fabrication of perovskite quantum dots
Adverse childhood experiences influence potentially dangerous firearm-related behavior in adulthood
Bacteria found to eat forever chemicals — and even some of their toxic byproducts
London cabbies’ planning strategies could help inform future of AI
More acidic oceans may affect the sex of oysters
Transportation insecurity in Detroit and beyond
New tool enables phylogenomic analyses of entire genomes
Uncovering the role of Y chromosome genes in male fertility in mice
A single gene underlies male mating morphs in ruff sandpipers
Presenting CASTER – a novel method for evolutionary research
Reforestation boosts biodiversity, while other land-based climate mitigation strategies fall short
Seasonal vertical migrations limit role of krill in deep-ocean carbon storage
Child mortality has risen since pandemic, new study shows
Super enzyme that regulates testosterone levels in males discovered in ‘crazy’ bird species
Study tracks physical and cognitive impairments associated with long COVID
Novel model advances microfiber-reinforced concrete research
Scientists develop new AI method to forecast cyclone rapid intensification
Interpreting metamaterials from an artistic view
Smoking cannabis in the home increases odds of detectable levels in children
Ohio State astronomy professor awarded Henry Draper Medal
Communities of color face greater barriers in accessing opioid medications for pain management
Researchers track sharp increase in diagnoses for sedative, hypnotic and anxiety use disorder in young adults
Advancement in DNA quantum computing using electric field gradients and nuclear spins
How pomalidomide boosts the immune system to fight multiple myeloma
PREPSOIL webinar explores soil literacy among youth: Why it matters and how educators can foster it
Imagining the physics of George R.R. Martin’s fictional universe
New twist in mystery of dinosaurs' origin
Baseline fasting glucose level, age, sex, and BMI and the development of diabetes in US adults
[Press-News.org] MRIs reveal signs of brain injuries not seen in CT scans, UCSF/SFGH researchers reportBetter diagnosis and prediction of outcomes from head injuries would help guide treatment and avoid re-injury