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US Army research/Haacke study

Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 11:36 am
by cheerleader
This is from last year, but I didn't find it as posted on the forum. Dr. Haacke is using his SWIM technology (which has been so helpful in elucidating venous injury in MS) in relationship to venous injury and TBI with the US Army research team.

Thanks to Dr. Haacke for exploring the connection of the venous vasculature. His inventions are helping us understand a side of brain injury that has been overlooked--the veins.
cheer

https://mrmc.amedd.army.mil/index.cfm?p ... ain_injury

A new dimension in imaging technology detects minute levels of vascular damage in the form of bleeding, clots and reduced levels of oxygenation that may better illuminate our understanding of brain injury, particularly related to trauma. Currently, the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command's Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center is managing a related project that is being led by Dr. E. Mark Haacke of Wayne State University.

Haacke recently presented his work in susceptibility weighted imaging and mapping, or SWIM, to a national panel of military and civilian medical experts. In this current project, he is exploring advanced magnetic resonance imaging methods and SWIM to improve diagnosis and outcome prediction of mild traumatic brain injury.

TATRC director Col. Karl Friedl noted, "This study is just one example of the promising research that TATRC supports. Collaborations among the investigators we bring together may lead to creative solutions we hadn't imagined."

In 1997, Haacke's team developed susceptibility weighted imaging, a highly sensitive technique to detect the presence of blood products. According to Haacke, it has been proved to be the most sensitive approach to visualizing cerebral microbleeds and shearing of vessels in traumatic brain injury.

"These conditions do seem to be reliable indicators of injury because we have imaged hundreds of adults over the years, of all ages, and rarely find them in the normal control population," said Haacke.

In recent years, Haacke's team and other neuroimaging researchers have applied concepts similar to SWIM to provide a new measure of iron content through quantitative susceptibility mapping. Haacke's approach, SWIM, is a rapid method that not only provides a quantitative map of iron but at the same time reveals the presence of cerebral microbleeds and abnormal veins. Iron in the form of deoxyhemoglobin can also be used to measure changes in local oxygen saturation, important for evaluating potential changes in local blood flow or tissue function (similar to what is seen in stroke using SWI). SWIM can also be used to monitor changes in iron content over time to see if previous iron deposition is being resorbed or if bleeding continues, both important diagnostic pieces of information for the clinician.

"SWIM is among the highest quality and fastest types of quantitative susceptibility mapping," said Haacke. "We believe it could be in much wider use in about a year."


Haacke has been working with researchers throughout the world for more than five years applying his techniques specifically to traumatic brain injury, stroke, Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis. In this current project, he has demonstrated that there is a lower impact load, either inertia or direct impact forces, which may damage only veins, and he has shown medullary vein damage that has not been visualized with other techniques. The medullary veins drain the frontal white matter of the brain, so reduced blood flow here could possibly impair the higher level frontal neurocognitive functions. In light of this, treatments that improve blood flow to the brain might be a promising direction to pursue.

While many investigators have focused on arterial changes related to brain injuries, Haacke has remained focused on the veins.

"Veins have relatively more fragile vessel walls than arteries and are more susceptible to damage during head injury," said Haacke. "This important component of the vascular system is often overlooked but may help us better diagnose what is wrong."


Dr. Anthony Pacifico, who manages TATRC's Medical Imaging Technologies Portfolio, said, "Dr. Haacke's team has a different slant for studying these injury regions that may lead to a new avenue in diagnosis and treatment for traumatic or other types of brain injury."

"For instance, the study of dementia could well benefit from SWI and SWIM," said Haacke. "Perhaps as much as one-third of all dementia is vascular dementia."

Haacke and Dr. Zhifeng Kou are working to complete a larger database of normal and mildly brain-injured imaging scans and define the appropriate parameters so that SWIM can be run at most clinical sites.

TATRC manages leading-edge research in various areas of medicine and technology, seeking synergies among projects that may quickly advance new products into the field to improve the care of the nation's warfighters.

Re: US Army research/Haacke study

Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 7:20 pm
by MrSuccess
Nice catch.

As I have repeatedly stated ... Trauma is linked to MS .... the numerical evidence is overwhelming. Not just in combat situations.

As I have said before .....and to , MARK MY WORDS ..... MS and TRAUMA are indeed , linked.


MrSuccess

Re: US Army research/Haacke study

Posted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 4:16 pm
by 1eye
MrSuccess wrote:Nice catch.

As I have repeatedly stated ... Trauma is linked to MS .... the numerical evidence is overwhelming. Not just in combat situations.

As I have said before .....and to , MARK MY WORDS ..... MS and TRAUMA are indeed , linked.
Good hitter, too.

Yes, probably by venous pressure changes, too. I would not go to war to find out. But it, as well as trauma from other causes, as well as other non-traumatic reasons for the changes, may be causing problems like mine.

Re: US Army research/Haacke study

Posted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 7:08 pm
by cheerleader
Agree, 1 eye. Those pressure changes would be more injurious to veins. Most stroke and microhemorrhage studies look at the arterial side. Dr. Haacke is exploring the venous side.
"Veins have relatively more fragile vessel walls than arteries and are more susceptible to damage during head injury," said Haacke. "This important component of the vascular system is often overlooked but may help us better diagnose what is wrong."

Here is the abstract from the paper published on this study:
Detection of hemorrhagic and axonal pathology in mild traumatic brain injury using advanced MRI: implications for neurorehabilitation.
Benson RR, Gattu R, Sewick B, Kou Z, Zakariah N, Cavanaugh JM, Haacke EM.
Center for Neurological Studies, Novi, MI, USA. drbenson@neurologicstudies.com

INTRODUCTION:
There is a need to more accurately diagnose milder traumatic brain injuries with increasing awareness of the high prevalence in both military and civilian populations. Magnetic resonance imaging methods may be capable of detecting a number of the pathoanatomical and pathophysiological consequences of focal and diffuse traumatic brain injury. Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) detects heme iron and reveals even small venous microhemorrhages occurring in diffuse vascular injury. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) reveals axonal injury by detecting alterations in water flow in and around injured axons. The overarching hypothesis of this paper is that newer, advanced MR imaging generates sensitive biomarkers of regional brain injury which allows for correlation with clinical signs and symptoms.
METHODS:
Studies involving subjects with a history of traumatic brain injury as well as healthy, non-trauma controls were used. Analysis involved comparison of TBI patients' imaging results with healthy controls as well as correlation of imaging findings with clinical measures of injury severity. An additional animal study of Sprague-Dawley albino rats compared imaging results with histopathological findings after the animals were sacrificed and stained for b-APP.
RESULTS:
SWI revealed small foci of hemosiderin for some patients while aggregate lesion volume on SWI correlated with clinical injury severity indices. Similarly, DTI showed striking group differences for fractional anisotropy over the white matter globally, while tract and voxel-based regional results colocalized with SWI and FLAIR lesions in some cases and correlated with clinical deficits. For the rats, correlations were seen between imaging findings and staining of axonal injury.
DISCUSSION:
Animal data gave important tissue correlations with imaging results. SWI and DTI are commercially available sequences that can improve the diagnostic and prognostic ability of the trauma clinician. These biomarkers of regional brain injury which are present in imaging shortly after acute injury and persist indefinitely can inform clinicians and researchers about not only injury severity but also which neurobehavioral systems were injured. Analogous to stroke rehabilitation, having an understanding of the distribution of brain injury should ultimately allow for development of more effective rehabilitation strategies and more efficient clinical interventional trials.

Re: US Army research/Haacke study

Posted: Thu Jan 17, 2013 3:40 pm
by MrSuccess
this research will be processed as well if not better , than anything we have seen so far.

The key is - funding- .

Another large step forward for CCSVI .


MrSuccess