Ping-Hong Yeh1, Binquan Wang1,
Terrence R. Oakes1, Haiying Tang2, John Graner1,
Hai Pan1, Wei Lui3, Lous M. French4,
Fletcher Munter3, Gerard Riedy3,5
1Henry Jackson Foundation
for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Rockville, MD, United States; 2Uniformed
Services University of the Health; 3National Capital Neuroimaging
Consortium, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington DC; 4Defense
& Veterans Brain Injury Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center,
Washington DC; 5National Intrepid Center of Excellence , Bethesda,
MD, United States
Detecting white matter changes of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and understanding their effects on neuropsychological consequence is important in treating and predicting the outcomes of brain trauma. We evaluated the combined tractography and spatial normalization methods, and examined the association between the DTI measures and neuropsychological test results in military TBI patients.