Jadwiga Rogowska1,
Piotr Bogorodzki2, Melissa Lopez-Larson1, Jace B. King1,
Deborah Yurgelun-Todd1
1Brain
Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States; 2Technical
University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
The purpose of this study was to utilize rfMRI to investigate changes in low-frequency fluctuations related to mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Traumatic brain injury is a serious public health problem, and the neurobiological correlates of mTBI have been difficult to study. While there are several ways to examine regional spontaneous activity in resting state fMRI, in this study we used fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations ALFF (fALFF), which is a fraction of ALFF in a given frequency band to the ALFF over the entire frequency range detectable in a given signal. We found that there are differences in fALFF between the two bands in many brain regions, specifically in regions associated with motor functions.The significant differences between HC and mTBI patients show that spontaneous activity in frequency bands located in frontal regions, particularly in medial frontal and anterior cingulate areas, are reduced in mTBI. These differences are important, as they demonstrate focal functional differences in the absence of task demands.