MRI-Based Method for Characterizing Axonal Microstructure in Traumatic Brain Injury
Neurites of the central nervous system can be conceptualized as cylindrical pores with finite lengths and radii. In response to physical trauma, axons may assume a “beaded” morphology which alters their ability to conduct electrical impulses, impairing brain function. These microstructural changes are thought to underlie some of the cognitive defects observed in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Current methods for characterizing traumatic brain injury (TBI) cannot provide microstructural detail on the 3-dimensional shape of axonal segments. Such detail is useful for the clinical management of patients with TBI.
Researchers at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development developed a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based data acquisition pipeline and processing framework to non-invasively characterize axonal shape and structure. The invention provides a method for non-invasively determining the joint distribution of pore lengths and radii within white matter pathways.
Competitive Advantages:
- Provides 3-dimensional data about axonal structure
- Provides microstructural detail
Commercial Applications:
- Diagnosis and monitoring patients with insults or injuries to white matter in the brain or nerves in the PNS
- Traumatic Brain Injury
Related Inventions
- E-079-2003
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E-173-2016
TAB-4039
MADCO-Accelerated Multidimensional Diffusion MRI -
E-226-2010
TAB-3998
Quantitative In Vivo Methods for Measuring Brain Networks
Patents
- Patent Cooperation Treaty
(PCT) PCT/US2015/062489
Filed on 2015-11-24
Status: Expired - US
Provisional (PRV) 62/083,834
Filed on 2014-11-24
Status: Abandoned - US Patent 10,871,539
Filed on 2017-05-24
Status: Issued
Publications
- Komlosh ME, et al. Submitted to Microporous and Mesoporous Materials. In press.
- Benjamini D, et al. White matter microstructure from nonparametric axon diameter distribution mapping.
Collaborations
- Licensing
- Collaboration