Publications by authors named "Jesse T Fischer"

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common and costly. Although neuroimaging modalities such as resting-state functional MRI (rsfMRI) promise to differentiate injured from healthy brains and prognosticate long-term outcomes, the field suffers from heterogeneous findings. To assess whether this heterogeneity stems from variability in the TBI populations studied or the imaging methods used, and to determine whether a consensus exists in this literature, we performed the first systematic review of studies comparing rsfMRI functional connectivity (FC) in patients with TBI to matched controls for seven canonical brain networks across injury severity, age, chronicity, population type, and various imaging methods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In survivors of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (msTBI), affective disruptions often remain underdetected and undertreated, in part due to poor understanding of the underlying neural mechanisms. We hypothesized that limbic circuits are integral to affective dysregulation in msTBI. To test this, we studied 19 adolescents with msTBI 17 months post-injury (TBI: M age 15.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a public health crisis, with neurobehavioral morbidity observed years after an injury associated with changes in related brain structures. A substantial literature base has established family environment as a significant predictor of neurobehavioral outcomes following pediatric TBI. The neural mechanisms linking family environment to neurobehavioral outcomes have, however, received less empiric study in this population.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) produces microstructural damage to white matter pathways connecting neural structures in pre-frontal and striatal regions involved in self-regulation (SR). Dorsal and ventral frontostriatal pathways have been linked to cognitive ("cool") and emotional ("hot") SR, respectively. We evaluated the relation of frontostriatal pathway fractional anisotropy (FA) 2 months post-TBI on cool and hot SR assessed 7 months post-TBI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pre-frontal limbic circuitry is vulnerable to effects of stress and injury. We examined microstructure of pre-frontal limbic circuitry after traumatic brain injury (TBI) or extracranial injury (EI) and its relation to post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS). Participants aged 8 to 15 years who sustained mild to severe TBI ( = 53) or EI ( = 26) in motor vehicle incidents were compared with healthy children ( = 38) in a prospective longitudinal study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: This prospective longitudinal study investigated sleep disturbance (SD) and internalizing problems after traumatic injury, including traumatic brain injury (TBI) or extracranial/bodily injury (EI) in children and adolescents, relative to typically developing (TD) children. We also examined longitudinal relations between SD and internalizing problems postinjury.

Method: Participants (N = 87) ages 8-15 included youth with TBI, EI, and TD children.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF