Correlation study of imaging characteristics of diffusion tensor imaging and the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale in children with tic disorders
10.3760/cma.j.cn101070-20230513-00378
- VernacularTitle:儿童抽动障碍弥散张量成像技术成像特点与耶鲁抽动严重程度量表评估的相关性研究
- Author:
Qianfang JIA
1
;
Xiwan LI
;
Shasha LI
;
Meng ZHANG
;
Bingxiang MA
Author Information
1. 新乡医学院第一附属医院儿童康复科,卫辉 453100
- Keywords:
Tic disorder;
Diffusion tensor imaging;
Yale Global Tic Severity Scale;
Child
- From:
Chinese Journal of Applied Clinical Pediatrics
2023;38(8):586-590
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To explore the correlation between imaging features of children with tic disorders and their features assessed by the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS).Methods:A retrospective study.A total of 33 children with tic disorders treated in the Department of Child Rehabilitation, the First Affiliated Hospital of Xinxiang Medical University from January 2022 to March 2023 were included in the tic disorder group, and 10 healthy age-matched children received physical examination during the same period were included in the healthy control group.Under the functional positioning of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the active area of children with tic disorders at varying degrees was found.In the region of interest (ROI), localization monitoring and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) were performed, and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and fractional anisotropy (FA) were recorded.In the same ROI (bilateral thalamus, genu of internal capsule, splenium of corpus callosum, globus pallidus, caudate nucleus) of children in healthy control group, ADC and FA were recorded.Imaging data were compared between groups using the independent sample t test, and their correlation with YGTSS scores was identified by the Pearson correlation analysis. Results:There were significant differences in ADC of the left thalamus (0.869±0.077 vs.0.794±0.083, P=0.022), the right thalamus (0.853±0.055 vs.0.798±0.054, P=0.014), the left caudate nucleus (0.871±0.121 vs.0.787±0.052, P=0.003) and the right caudate nucleus (0.856±0.075 vs.0.788±0.063, P=0.010) between tic disorder group and healthy control group.No significant differences were detected in ADC of the remaining ROI between groups (all P>0.05). There were significant differences in FA of the left thalamus (0.259±0.050 vs.0.344±0.077, P=0.007), the right thalamus (0.265±0.057 vs.0.347±0.095, P=0.026) and the right caudate nucleus (0.168±0.118 vs.0.309±0.181, P=0.041) between tic disorder group and healthy control group.No significant differences were detected in ADC and FA between children with mild and moderate tic disorders (all P>0.05). ADC of the left thalamus and the right caudate nucleus were significantly correlated with YGTSS scores in children with tic disorders ( r=0.407 and 0.372, respectively; all P<0.05). FA of the right thalamus was negatively correlated with YGTSS scores in children with tic disorders ( r=-0.439, P<0.05). Conclusions:ADC of the thalamus and caudate nucleus, and FA of the right thalamus are significantly correlated with YGTSS scores of children with tic disorders.High ADC of the left thalamus and the right caudate nucleus are correlated with high YGTSS scores, indicating a severe symptom of tic disorder in children.A high FA of the right thalamus is correlated with low YGTSS scores, indicating a mild symptom of tic disorder in children.