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Article Dans Une Revue Pediatric Radiology Année : 2023

Behavioral-play familiarization for non-sedated magnetic resonance imaging in young children with mild traumatic brain injury

Résumé

Background: Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) sustained in early childhood affects the brain at a peak developmental period and may disrupt sensitive stages of skill acquisition, thereby compromising child functioning. However, due to the challenges of collecting non-sedated neuroimaging data in young children the consequences of mTBI on young children’s brains have not been systematically studied. In typically developing preschool children (TDC, 3-5 years), brief a behavioral-play familiarization provides an effective alternative to sedation for acquiring awake magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a time- and resource-efficient manner. To date, no study has applied such an approach for acquiring non-sedated MRI in preschool children with mTBI who may present with additional MRI acquisition challenges such as agitation or anxiety. Objective: The present study aimed to compare the effectiveness of a brief behavioral-play familiarization for acquiring non-sedated MRI for research purposes between young children with and without mTBI, and to identify factors associated with successful MRI acquisition. Materials and methods: Preschool children with mTBI (n=13) and TDC (n=24) underwent a 15-minute behavioral-play MRI familiarization followed by a 35-minute non-sedated MRI protocol. Success rate was compared between groups, MRI quality was assessed quantitatively, and factors predicting success were documented. Results: Among the 37 participants, 15 TDC (63%) and 10 mTBI (77%) reached the MRI acquisition success criteria (i.e., completing the two first sequences). The success rate was not significantly different between groups (p=.48; 95% CI [-0.36 14.08]; Cramer’s V=.15). The images acquired were of high-quality in 100% (for both groups) of the structural images, and 60% (for both groups) of the diffusion images. Factors associated with success included older child age (B=0.73, p=.007, exp(B)=3.11, 95% CI [1.36 7.08]) and fewer parental concerns (B=-1.56, p=.02, exp(B)=0.21, 95% CI [0.05 0.82]) about the MRI procedure. Conclusion: Using brief behavioral-play familiarization allows acquisition of high-quality non-sedated MRI in young children with mTBI with success rates comparable to those of non-injured peers.
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Dates et versions

hal-04044229 , version 1 (24-03-2023)

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Fanny Dégeilh, Jessica Lacombe-Barrios, Carola Tuerk, Catherine Lebel, Véronique Daneault, et al.. Behavioral-play familiarization for non-sedated magnetic resonance imaging in young children with mild traumatic brain injury. Pediatric Radiology, 2023, pp.1-31. ⟨10.1007/s00247-023-05592-y⟩. ⟨hal-04044229⟩
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