Attention deficits are widespread and disabling after significant traumatic brain injury (TBI). Controversy remains about how to measure attention deficits in this population, as well as their appropriate treatment. Prior research suggest that prefrontal dysfunction, related to focal injury and denervation resulting from diffuse axonal injury, is central to the attention deficits seen in this population. Much of this prefrontal pathology is """"""""invisible"""""""" to studies of brain structure. The proposed research intends to use functional imaging to explore the role of prefrontal cortex in the attention deficits seen after TBI, and to examine changes in prefrontal function resulting from drug treatment, as they relate to drug-related changes in behavioral performance. Subjects with TBI will be recruited for a previously-funded study of drug treatments of attention deficits. In that study, subjects will receive methylphenidate and placebo in a cross- over design, while extensive data are collected on many different aspects of attentional functions in both drug conditions. Subsequently, 20 of the subjects with TBI and 20 control subjects will be recruited to participate in this proposed study. Subjects will receive 2 fMRI scans (one on methylphenidate and one on placebo, blinded and in counterbalanced order). In each scanning session, several measures will be taken, including: resting cerebral blood flow to prefrontal cortical regions; cerebral blood flow in these same regions during a sustained attention tasks; and BOLD activation measures within the context of a distraction paradigm. Resting blood flow measures will be used to predict severity of attention deficits. Changes in blood flow and activation (off drug) in response to the 2 probe tasks will be used to predict behavioral performance in those tasks. Finally, drug effects on blood flow and activation will be correlated with drug effects on performance to examine the mechanism of action of the drug. Collectively, these results will advance the theoretical understanding of the nature of TBI-associated attention deficits and the possible mechanism of action of therapeutically useful drugs.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Resource-Related Research Projects (R24)
Project #
5R24HD039621-02
Application #
6502548
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHD1)
Project Start
2001-07-01
Project End
2002-06-30
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Moss Rehabilitation Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19141
Kim, Junghoon; Whyte, John; Patel, Sunil et al. (2012) Methylphenidate modulates sustained attention and cortical activation in survivors of traumatic brain injury: a perfusion fMRI study. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 222:47-57
Kim, Junghoon; Whyte, John; Patel, Sunil et al. (2012) A perfusion fMRI study of the neural correlates of sustained-attention and working-memory deficits in chronic traumatic brain injury. Neurorehabil Neural Repair 26:870-80
Kim, Junghoon; Whyte, John; Patel, Sunil et al. (2010) Resting cerebral blood flow alterations in chronic traumatic brain injury: an arterial spin labeling perfusion FMRI study. J Neurotrauma 27:1399-411
Avants, Brian; Duda, Jeffrey T; Kim, Junghoon et al. (2008) Multivariate analysis of structural and diffusion imaging in traumatic brain injury. Acad Radiol 15:1360-75
Whyte, John; Vaccaro, Monica; Grieb-Neff, Patricia et al. (2008) The effects of bromocriptine on attention deficits after traumatic brain injury: a placebo-controlled pilot study. Am J Phys Med Rehabil 87:85-99
Kim, Junghoon; Avants, Brian; Patel, Sunil et al. (2008) Structural consequences of diffuse traumatic brain injury: a large deformation tensor-based morphometry study. Neuroimage 39:1014-26
Wang, Ze; Fernandez-Seara, Maria A (2006) 2D partially parallel imaging with k-space surrounding neighbors-based data reconstruction. Magn Reson Med 56:1389-96
Segal, Mary; Weiner, Mark (2006) Caregiving burden responses differ for Internet and telephone data collection. AMIA Annu Symp Proc :1088
Wang, Ze; Wang, Jiongjiong; Calhoun, Vince et al. (2006) Strategies for reducing large fMRI data sets for independent component analysis. Magn Reson Imaging 24:591-6
Kim, Junghoon; Whyte, John; Wang, Jiongjiong et al. (2006) Continuous ASL perfusion fMRI investigation of higher cognition: quantification of tonic CBF changes during sustained attention and working memory tasks. Neuroimage 31:376-85

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