Dear Editor,
The article published by Grassi et al.[1] in Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria has aroused great interest by presenting relevant data with a simple methodological
design. The authors didactically exposed the most recent neuroimaging features of
diffuse axonal injury in magnetic resonance imaging, which include diffusion tensor
imaging and its most commonly-applied analytical methods (region of interest, tractography
and voxelwise analyses).
Diffuse axonal injury is one of the most recently-studied areas of traumatic brain
injury research because of its impact on public health policies. Diffuse axonal injury
severity is usually rated as mild, moderate or severe. Its severity presents itself
as a direct risk factor for mortality and dependence of traumatic brain injury patients.
Diffuse axonal injury is also believed to be the pathophysiological feature of mild
traumatic brain injury persistent symptoms. Most of the symptoms of patients with
mild traumatic brain injury are transient and resolve spontaneously. Nevertheless,
about 30% of these patients present with psychological, cognitive or clinical symptoms
three months post-injury[2]. Conventional neuroimaging techniques are not sensitive enough to detect diffuse
axonal injury, the major brain injury observed in mild traumatic brain injury. Diffusion
tensor imaging is a neuroimaging technique capable of revealing microstructural axonal
injuries because it is sufficiently sensitive to detect subtle changes in white matter
fiber tracts. Thus, the recently-available tools are enough to diagnose diffuse axonal
injury, but there is still data lacking about the cognitive prognosis of these neuroimaging
findings[3].
The study by Grassi et al.[1] stands out for reviewing the main diffusion tensor imaging analytical techniques
for the evaluation of diffuse axonal injury after traumatic brain injury. The way
in which the authors present relevant information about these different methods, as
well as the way important publications are discussed in each section, should be praised.
The ability to choose clinical studies of diffusion tensor imaging analytical methods
(region of interest, tractography, voxelwise analyses) and the exposition of their
clinical results helps readers understand the current contribution of these imaging
approaches in diffuse axonal injury pathophysiology, evaluation, and outcome.
The authors perfectly summed up, in the introduction of the article, when they contextualized
the diffuse axonal injury impact on morbidity, presented traumatic brain injury's
most common score evaluations (CRASH and International Mission for Prognosis and Analysis
of Clinical Trials [IMPACT] score), and exposed diffuse axonal injury pathophysiology,
remembering that it is more than an inertial mechanism of rotational acceleration-deacceleration.
The authors could have discussed more about the relationship between diffusion tensor
imaging alteration and outcome. Hellstrøm et al.[4] published a voxelwise analysis, showing a strong association between diffusion tensor
imaging and the composite measure of self-reported score outcomes (cognitive, somatic
and emotional symptoms) 12 months after mild traumatic brain injury. Galanaud et al.[5] created a diffusion tensor imaging score based on fractional anisotropy, mean diffusivity,
axial diffusivity, and radial diffusivity. In severe traumatic brain injury patients,
this score showed a 64% sensibility and 95% specificity for the prediction of an unfavorable
outcome, based on the Glasgow Outcome Scale, when compared with the IMPACT score.
Net reclassification improvement and integrated discrimination improvement also demonstrated
a relevant improvement in the diffusion tensor imaging score compared with the IMPACT
score (P < 0.001).
Finally, the authors’ publication presented us with a distinguished article about
a recently-studied point in traumatic brain injury research and they have opened the
field for further longitudinal studies. That is why the article's merit must be emphasized.
Some small details could be clearer in the text, but these questions do not diminish
the importance of this publication for the scientific community.