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| Title: | Tractography-Based Asymmetries in Acquired Brain Injury: Contributions to the Neuropsychological Profile and Rehabilitation in a Case-Series | Authors: | Bordón Guerra, Rosario Peñate Castro, Wenceslao Ferreiro Diaz-Velis, Eilin Sosa Pérez, Coralia De Las Nieve Bisshopp Alfonso, Sara Hernández Hernández, María Zaida Hernández Fleta, José Luis Morera Molina, Jesús Manuel |
UNESCO Clasification: | 32 Ciencias médicas 320711 Neuropatología 321308 Neurocirugía 61 Psicología |
Keywords: | Normative Data Spanish Stimulation Depression Anxiety, et al |
Issue Date: | 2025 | Journal: | Brain Sciences | Abstract: | Background: Acquired brain injury (ABI) often produces heterogeneous cognitive and emotional outcomes that are not fully explained by conventional neuropsychological testing. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) tractography may capture patient-specific patterns of white matter connectivity and thereby complement clinical assessment. Methods: We conducted an exploratory case series of nine patients in the subacute phase of ABI (traumatic brain injury or subarachnoid hemorrhage). Each underwent a brief cognitive-emotional battery and 1.5 T DTI with deterministic tractography of major association tracts and the corpus callosum. Tract lateralization was quantified using the Structural Asymmetry Index (SAI), and individual profiles were compared with neuropsychological and emotional data. Results: Six patients met criteria for clinically significant anxiety, and four for depression, often dissociated from global cognitive screening. Tractography revealed heterogeneous asymmetry patterns, most often in the superior longitudinal fasciculus, uncinate fasciculus, and cingulum. In several cases, structural asymmetries diverged from neuropsychological findings, suggesting dissociations between behavioral testing and connectivity-based measures. Conclusions: Within-subject tract asymmetry analysis provided preliminary, potentially clinically relevant information not captured by tests alone. These findings indicate that individualized tractography could enrich the interpretation of cognitive and emotional profiles and help guide hypothesis generation for connectivity-informed neurorehabilitation. | URI: | https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/153188 | ISSN: | 2076-3425 | DOI: | 10.3390/brainsci15111155 | Source: | Brain Sciences[EISSN 2076-3425],v. 15 (11), (Noviembre 2025) |
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