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Bennet I. Omalu, M.D., M.P.H. Forensic Pathologist/ Neuropathologist

THE FORENSIC NEUROPATHOLOGY OF BLUNT FORCE TRAUMA OF THE BRAIN Part 5: Diffuse Traumatic Brain Injury. Bennet I. Omalu, M.D., M.P.H. Forensic Pathologist/ Neuropathologist. DIFFUSE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY. The sine qua non of Diffuse Traumatic Brain Injury is Diffuse Traumatic Axonal Injury

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Bennet I. Omalu, M.D., M.P.H. Forensic Pathologist/ Neuropathologist

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  1. THE FORENSIC NEUROPATHOLOGY OF BLUNT FORCE TRAUMA OF THE BRAIN Part 5: Diffuse Traumatic Brain Injury Bennet I. Omalu, M.D., M.P.H. Forensic Pathologist/ Neuropathologist

  2. DIFFUSE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY • The sine qua non of Diffuse Traumatic Brain Injury is Diffuse Traumatic Axonal Injury • Typically associated with diffuse inertial biomechanical loading and acceleration-deceleration shearing forces • Axonal injury is not localized to a single region of the brain, it is diffusely spread • Para-sagittal structures of the brain are most vulnerable especially the splenium of the corpus callosum • Diffuse Traumatic Axonal Injury is associated with gliding contusions • Note that axonal injury may be associated with non-traumatic causes like viral encephalitis, hypoxic injury and toxic encephalopathies, traumatic axonal injury is solely caused by trauma

  3. DIFFUSE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY • There are three neuropathologic grades of diffuse traumatic axonal injury: • Adams Grade 1 DAI • Diffuse cytotoxic edema, + APP immunohistochemistry • Adams Grade 2 DAI • Diffuse cytotoxic edema, petechial/ecchymotic hemorrhages in corpus callosum, + APP • Adams Grade 3 DAI • Diffuse cytotoxic edema, petechial/ ecchymotic hemorrhages in corpus callosum and dorso-lateral brainstem, + APP. Typically associated with loss of consciousness at the scene

  4. PATHOLOGIC DIAGNOSIS OF DIFFUSE AXONAL INJURY • Following gross grading of DAI, tissue immuno-histochemistry must be performed using antibodies for Amyloid Precursor Protein [APP] • Amyloid Precursor Protein [APP] • A single-membrane spanning protein found in cell membranes and membranous organelles of every cell • Involved in diverse metabolic and regulatory cell pathways including cell adhesion and inter-cellular signaling • Encoded by APP gene on Chromosome 21 • Parent compound of Beta-Amyloid peptide of Alzheimer’s Disease • Synthesized in the perikaryon • Fast antero-grade and retro-grade axonal transport by microtubules [100-400 mm/day] • Without axonal injury APP is not detected by tissue immunohistochemistery

  5. PATHOLOGIC DIAGNOSIS OF DIFFUSE AXONAL INJURY • Amyloid Precursor Protein [APP], cont’d • Following axonal injury and disruption of the micro-tubule cytoskeleton, APP accumulates both proximally and distally to point of axonal injury • It takes APP 2 – 3 hours post injury to accumulate sufficiently to be detected • This can shorten to 1 hour with antigen retrieval methods • APP has been observed up to 99 days post injury [3 months] • APP associated with diffuse hypoxic-ischemic injury shows a geographic pattern of immunopositivity • Trauma-induced DAI exhibits a diffuse focal pattern of APP+ • Using silver impregnation and H&E stains, axonal injury can be identified after 15 hours of injury, axonal spheroids of Cajal, axonal viscosities and swellings may be seen • APP immuno-histochemistry is an important tool in medico-legal cases

  6. DAI AND APP * Adams Grade 2 DAI with corpus callosal hemorrhages and a small gliding contusion [*]

  7. DAI AND APP APP IMMUNOSTAIN H&E Axonal Spheroids and Varicosities

  8. OTHER TYPES OF DIFFUSE BRAIN INJURY • DIFFUSE VASCULAR INJURY • Presents immediately after trauma, usually fatal • Brain exhibits only peri-vascular petechial and micro-hemorrhages in lobar cortical white matter • DIFFUSE CEREBRAL FAT EMBOLISM • Associated with fractures of long bones with surgical fixation/manipulation • Associated with extensive soft tissue and crush injuries • Presents 2 to 3 days after trauma • Manifests as diffuse cortical white matter petechial perivascular hemorrhages • Fat stains show intra-luminal fat globules in penetrating parenchymal vessels • Peri-vascular rarefaction and demyelination may follow

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