Alterations in cortical thickness and volumes of subcortical structures in pediatric patients with complete spinal cord injury

Author:

Wang Ling12,Yang Beining12,Zheng Weimin3ORCID,Liang Tengfei4,Chen Xin12,Chen Qian5ORCID,Du Jubao6,Lu Jie12ORCID,Li Baowei4,Chen Nan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Xuanwu Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Brain Informatics Beijing China

3. Department of Radiology, Beijing Chaoyang Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

4. Department of Medical Imaging Affiliated Hospital of Hebei Engineering University Handan China

5. Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

6. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Xuanwu Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAimsTo study the changes in cortical thickness and subcortical gray matter structures in children with complete spinal cord injury (CSCI), reveal the possible causes of dysfunction beyond sensory motor dysfunction after CSCI, and provide a possible neural basis for corresponding functional intervention training.MethodsThirty‐seven pediatric CSCI patients and 34 age‐, gender‐matched healthy children as healthy controls (HCs) were recruited. The 3D high‐resolution T1‐weighted structural images of all subjects were obtained using a 3.0 Tesla MRI system. Statistical differences between pediatric CSCI patients and HCs in cortical thickness and volumes of subcortical gray matter structures were evaluated. Then, correlation analyses were performed to analyze the correlation between the imaging indicators and clinical characteristics.ResultsCompared with HCs, pediatric CSCI patients showed decreased cortical thickness in the right precentral gyrus, superior temporal gyrus, and posterior segment of the lateral sulcus, while increased cortical thickness in the right lingual gyrus and inferior occipital gyrus. The volume of the right thalamus in pediatric CSCI patients was significantly smaller than that in HCs. No significant correlation was found between the imaging indicators and the injury duration, sensory scores, and motor scores of pediatric CSCI patients.ConclusionsThese findings demonstrated that the brain structural reorganizations of pediatric CSCI occurred not only in sensory motor areas but also in cognitive and visual related brain regions, which may suggest that the visual processing, cognitive abnormalities, and related early intervention therapy also deserve greater attention beyond sensory motor rehabilitation training in pediatric CSCI patients.

Funder

Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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