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Diffusion tensor imaging of incentive effects in prospective memory after pediatric traumatic brain injury
Authors:McCauley Stephen R  Wilde Elisabeth A  Bigler Erin D  Chu Zili  Yallampalli Ragini  Oni Margaret B  Wu Trevor C  Ramos Marco A  Pedroza Claudia  Vásquez Ana C  Hunter Jill V  Levin Harvey S
Affiliation:Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Alliance of Baylor College of Medicine and University of Texas-Houston Medical School, Houston, Texas, USA. mccauley@bcm.edu
Abstract:Few studies exist investigating the brain-behavior relations of event-based prospective memory (EB-PM) impairments following traumatic brain injury (TBI). To address this, children with moderate-to-severe TBI performed an EB-PM test with two motivational enhancement conditions and underwent concurrent diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) at 3 months post-injury. Children with orthopedic injuries (OI; n=37) or moderate-to-severe TBI (n=40) were contrasted. Significant group differences were found for fractional anisotropy (FA) and apparent diffusion coefficient for orbitofrontal white matter (WM), cingulum bundles, and uncinate fasciculi. The FA of these WM structures in children with TBI significantly correlated with EB-PM performance in the high, but not the low motivation condition. Regression analyses within the TBI group indicated that the FA of the left cingulum bundle (p=0.003), left orbitofrontal WM (p<0.02), and left (p<0.02) and right (p<0.008) uncinate fasciculi significantly predicted EB-PM performance in the high motivation condition. We infer that the cingulum bundles, orbitofrontal WM, and uncinate fasciculi are important WM structures mediating motivation-based EB-PM responses following moderate-to-severe TBI in children.
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