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Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D....

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Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit, Ph.D. 1 1 Department of Biomedical Engineering, Marquette University 2 Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin
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Page 1: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury

Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D.1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D.2 Brian D. Schmit, Ph.D.1

1 Department of Biomedical Engineering, Marquette University2 Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin

Page 2: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Motivation Traditional MRI is not sensitive to axonal injury

(Falconer, 1994; Kulkarni, 1988)

Traditional MRI is no better than neurological exam (Flanders, 1999; Shepard, 1999; Bondurant, 1990)

Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) is more sensitive to axon injury (Ford, 1994; Schwartz, 2003)

Objective: Determine if DTI is sensitive to quantitative measures of sensory function (i.e. electrophysiology).

Page 3: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI)

DTI uses MRI gradients to “tag” diffusing H2O molecules

Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) is dependent on boundaries to diffusion

lADC

tADC

Page 4: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Differential Sensitivity of DTIAxonal Damage (Song, 2003; 2002; Nair, 2005; Sun, 2006)

↓ lADC

Myelin Damage (Song, 2003; 2002; Nair, 2005; Sun, 2006)

↑ tADC

Image Source: Ellingson et al., Concepts in Magn Reson Part A, 2008

Page 5: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Spinal Somatosensory Evoked Potentials (SpSEPs)

NormalIncomplete SCI Complete SCI

Normal SCI

No temporalCoherence

Loss ofAmplitude

Page 6: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Experimental Spinal Contusion

Impactor

Vertebral Body

Page 7: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Spinothalamic Tract (STT) & Pain

C-fiber input to LSTT (Valeriani, 2007; Li, 1991; Latash, 1988)A-fiber input to MSTT (Valeriani, 2007; Latash, 1988)

Kandel, 2000, Principles of Neural Science

Page 8: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Hypothesis

Diffusion measurements in the spinothalamic tracts (STTs) correlate with specific components of the SpSEP during high-intensity sciatic nerve stimulation.

Page 9: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Methods - Animals

Neurologically intact (n = 8) 2 weeks after SCI (n = 8) 5 weeks after SCI (n = 8)

Spinal Contusion at T8

(Modified from Baker, 2005)

Page 10: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Methods ~ DTI 9.4-T MR Scanner, Embedded in Agarose Gelatin 24 axial images though spinal cord (~7 cm) 6 directions, 100 um resolution Standard Pulsed Gradient Spin-Echo DTI (PG-SE) b = 500 s/mm2

Page 11: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Methods ~ SpSEPs

- Animals were anesthetized (Ketamine/Medetomidine IP)-400 V, 10 mA, 3.5 Hz monophasic square wave, pulse duration 500 us-Amplified 20,000x, sampled at 21 kHz, total of 1000 epochs

Image source: Ellingson et al., J Neurotrauma, 2008, Under Review

Page 12: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Results ~ DTI

T2-w

lADC

Page 13: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Results ~ SpSEPs

Page 14: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Results~Correlation DTI and SpSEPsLSTT lADC Late component (C-fiber)

(All animals, R = 0.905, P < 0.001)(2 weeks, R = 0.817, P < 0.01)(5 weeks, R = 0.843, P < 0.01)

MSTT lADC Very Early Component (A-fiber)(2 weeks, R = 0.812, P < 0.01)(5 weeks, R = 0.841, P < 0.01)

Dorsal Columns lADC & tADC Very Early to Early

lADC: VE (2 weeks, R = 0.852, P < 0.01) E (5 weeks, R = -0.718, P < 0.05)

tADC: VE (2 weeks, R = 0.792, P < 0.01) E (5 weeks, R = 0.835, P < 0.01)

Page 15: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Discussion LSTT lADC Late component (C-fiber)

MSTT lADC Very Early Component (A-fiber)

Dorsal Columns lADC & tADC Very Early to Early

Page 16: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Future Studies More groups & more specimens

Neural stem cells (C17.2) known to cause allodynia Does lADC & SpSEP amplitude increase beyond control?

Prognostic capabilities of DTI Does DTI predict final neurological outcome?

Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) Is DTI sensitive to motor function deficit?

Page 17: Functional Correlates of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Spinal Cord Injury Benjamin M. Ellingson, Ph.D. 1,2 Shekar N. Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D. 2 Brian D. Schmit,

Thank youBrian Schmit, Ph.D.Shekar Kurpad, M.D., Ph.D.Carmen Clark, B.S.James Grosek, B.S.Angie Geiger, B.S.Christy Stadig, B.S.Krishnaj Gourab, M.D.

Funding: NIHFalk FoundationDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Marquette UniversityDepartment of Neurosurgery, Radiology, Biophysics at MCWVA Medical Center, Milwaukee WI


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