Authors

  1. de Souza, Nicola L. PhD
  2. Esopenko, Carrie PhD
  3. Jia, Yuane PhD
  4. Parrott, J. Scott PhD
  5. Merkley, Tricia L. PhD
  6. Dennis, Emily L. PhD
  7. Hillary, Frank G. PhD
  8. Velez, Carmen MA
  9. Cooper, Douglas B. PhD
  10. Kennedy, Jan E. PhD
  11. Lewis, Jeffrey D. MD, PhD
  12. York, Gerald E. MD
  13. Menefee, Deleene S. PhD
  14. McCauley, Stephen R. PhD
  15. Bowles, Amy O. MD
  16. Wilde, Elisabeth A. PhD
  17. Tate, David F. PhD

Abstract

Objective: Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) commonly occur among military Service Members and Veterans and have heterogenous, but also overlapping symptom presentations, which often complicate the diagnoses of underlying impairments and development of effective treatment plans. Thus, we sought to examine whether the combination of whole brain gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM) structural measures with neuropsychological performance can aid in the classification of military personnel with mTBI and PTSD.

 

Methods: Active-Duty US Service Members (n = 156; 87.8% male) with a history of mTBI, PTSD, combined mTBI+PTSD, or orthopedic injury completed a neuropsychological battery and T1- and diffusion-weighted structural neuroimaging. Cortical, subcortical, ventricular, and WM volumes and whole brain fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), radial diffusivity (RD), and axial diffusivity (AD) were calculated. Latent profile analyses were performed to determine how the GM and WM indicators, together with neuropsychological indicators, classified individuals.

 

Results: For both GM and WM, respectively, a 4-profile model was the best fit. The GM model identified greater ventricular volumes in Service Members with cognitive symptoms, including those with a diagnosis of mTBI, either alone or with PTSD. The WM model identified reduced FA and elevated RD in those with psychological symptoms, including those with PTSD or mTBI and comorbid PTSD. However, contrary to expectation, a global neural signature unique to those with comorbid mTBI and PTSD was not identified.

 

Conclusions: The findings demonstrate that neuropsychological performance alone is more robust in differentiating Active-Duty Service Members with mTBI and PTSD, whereas global neuroimaging measures do not reliably differentiate between these groups.