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The Neuroscientist
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Diffuse Axonal Injury: An Important Form of Traumatic Brain Damage

Thomas A. Gennarelli

Department of Neurosurgery and Center for Neurosciences Allegheny University of the Health Sciences Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Lawrence E. Thibault

Department of Neurosurgery and Center for Neurosciences Allegheny University of the Health Sciences Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

David I. Graham

Department of Neuropathology University of Glasgow Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom

Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) is a frequent form of traumatic brain injury in which a clinical spectrum of in creasing injury severity is paralleled by progressively increasing amounts of axonal damage in the brain. When less severe, DAI is associated with concussive syndromes; when most severe, it causes prolonged traumatic coma that is not related to mass lesions, increased intracranial pressure, or ischemia. Pathological investigations of DAI demonstrate widespread but heterogeneous microscopic damage to axons throughout the white matter of the cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres and brainstem. There is a propensity for injury to occur in the central third of the brain, and the corpus callosum and brain stem are especially prone to injury. In these locations, traumatic axonal damage can occur in several degrees of severity, ranging from transient disturbances of ionic homeostasis to swelling, impairment of axoplasmic transport with secondary (delayed) axotomy and primary axotomy (tearing). A more detailed understanding of the processes involved in axonal damage is crucial to the development of effective treatment for the clinical syndromes of DAI. NEUROSCIENTIST 4:202-215, 1998

Key Words: KEY WORDS Axonal injury • Brain trauma • Head injury

The Neuroscientist, Vol. 4, No. 3, 202-215 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/107385849800400316


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