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February 08, 2000; 54 (3) Articles

Reduction of corpus callosum growth after severe traumatic brain injury in children

H.S. Levin, D.A. Benavidez, K. Verger-Maestre, N. Perachio, J. Song, D.B. Mendelsohn, J.M. Fletcher
First published February 8, 2000, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.54.3.647
H.S. Levin
PhD
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D.A. Benavidez
PhD
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K. Verger-Maestre
PhD
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N. Perachio
MA
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J. Song
MS
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D.B. Mendelsohn
MD
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J.M. Fletcher
PhD
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Citation
Reduction of corpus callosum growth after severe traumatic brain injury in children
H.S. Levin, D.A. Benavidez, K. Verger-Maestre, N. Perachio, J. Song, D.B. Mendelsohn, J.M. Fletcher
Neurology Feb 2000, 54 (3) 647; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.54.3.647

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Abstract

Objective: To study effects of closed head injury (CHI) severity on development of corpus callosum (CC) in children, using MRI.

Background: Vulnerability of CC to diffuse axonal injury has been shown in adults and children by neuropathologic and MRI studies. Given continued development of CC through the second decade, serial MRI could characterize effects of CHI on CC growth in children.

Methods: MRI performed at 3 and 36 months after severe (mean age = 10.3 years, n = 25) and mild to moderate (mean age = 9.7 years, n = 28) CHI. Mild to moderate and severe CHI groups did not differ in demographic features. Morphometry of T1-weighted midsagittal CC by two operators with satisfactory interrater reliability yielded uncorrected and corrected CC volume.

Results: An interaction of occasion with CHI severity was present as CC area decreased from 3 to 36 months in severely injured children and increased in the mild to moderate CHI group. Uncorrected CC area was correlated with acute CHI severity and functional outcome at 36 months postinjury.

Conclusions: Morphometric measurement of CC area provides a useful index of diffuse injury, which is related to functional outcome of CHI in children.

  • Received May 17, 1999.
  • Accepted September 3, 1999.
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