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Original

The neural correlates of cognitive fatigue in traumatic brain injury using functional MRI

, , DPhil, , &
Pages 420-432 | Received 01 Oct 2008, Accepted 25 Jan 2009, Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Primary objective: The present study used fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) to objectively assess cognitive fatigue in persons with traumatic brain injury (TBI). It was hypothesized that while performing a cognitive task, TBI participants would show increased brain activity over time, indicative of increased cerebral ‘effort’ which might manifest as the subjective feeling of cognitive fatigue.

Methods and procedures: Functional MRI was used to track brain activity across time while 11 TBI patients with moderate–severe injury and 11 age-matched healthy controls (HCs) performed a modified Symbol Digit Modalities Task (mSDMT). Cognitive fatigue was operationally defined as a relative increase in cerebral activation across time compared to that seen in HCs. ROIs were derived from the Chauduri and Behan model of cognitive fatigue.

Main outcomes and results: While performing the mSDMT, participants with a TBI showed increased activity, while HCs subsequently showed decreased activity in several regions including the middle frontal gyrus, superior parietal cortex, basal ganglia and anterior cingulate.

Conclusions: Increased brain activity exhibited by participants with a TBI might represent increased cerebral effort which may be manifested as cognitive fatigue. Functional MRI appears to be a potentially useful tool for understanding the neural mechanisms associated with cognitive fatigue in TBI.

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