Newswise, July 22, 2016--Traumatic brain , (TBI) with a loss
of consciousness (LOC) may be associated with later development of Parkinson’s
disease but not Alzheimer’s disease or incident dementia, according to a study
conducted at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the University of
Washington School of Medicine.
The research, published today in JAMA Neurology, contradicts
common assumptions about the relationship between TBI and Alzheimer’s disease
as found in other high-profile studies.
There is great interest in the late effects of TBI and the widespread public health implications. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 1.3 million Americans visit an emergency department each year because of a TBI-related injury.
The research team studied head injury data from 7,130 older adults – the largest study ever on this topic – as part of three prospective cohort studies that performed annual or biennial cognitive and clinical testing. Of this group, 865 people had suffered TBI with LOC at some point before the study began.
There is great interest in the late effects of TBI and the widespread public health implications. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 1.3 million Americans visit an emergency department each year because of a TBI-related injury.
The research team studied head injury data from 7,130 older adults – the largest study ever on this topic – as part of three prospective cohort studies that performed annual or biennial cognitive and clinical testing. Of this group, 865 people had suffered TBI with LOC at some point before the study began.
Of the 865, 142 had been unconscious for more than one hour.
The researchers evaluated associations between TBI and late-life clinical
outcomes, such as dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment,
Parkinson’s disease and change in parkinsonian signs. Roughly 23 percent of the
study group had brain autopsies, and in that group researchers searched for any
link between TBI and neuropathological findings.
Neuropathology is considered
the gold standard for diagnosing neurodegenerative disease.
No statistically significant relationship between TBI with LOC
and dementia risk was discovered when the group with TBI with LOC was compared
with the 1,537 patients who developed dementia during the study. Results for
Alzheimer’s disease (diagnosed in 1,322 study participants) were similar.
However, regression data showed a strong association between TBI with LOC
greater than an hour and Parkinson’s disease (117 cases during the study).
Neuropathological findings at autopsy (1,652 autopsy cases) showed no
association between TBI with LOC and beta amyloid plaques or neurofibrillary
tangles, the hallmark indicators of Alzheimer’s disease.
However, the autopsies
found an increased risk for Lewy bodies (abnormal aggregates of protein) in TBI
with LOC less than an hour and an increased risk of cerebral microinfarcts
(microscopic stroke) in TBI with LOC more than an hour.
“The results of this study suggest that some individuals with
a history of TBI are at risk for late-life neurodegeneration but not
Alzheimer’s disease,” says Kristen Dams-O’Connor, PhD, Co-Director of the Brian
Injury Research Center and Associate Professor in the Department of
Rehabilitative Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
“We want to identify and treat post-TBI neurodegeneration
while people are still alive, but to do this, we need to first understand the
disease. Prospective TBI brain donation studies can help us characterize
post-TBI neurodegeneration, identify risk factors, and develop effective
treatments.”
These findings suggest that clinicians may be misdiagnosing
late-life TBI-related neurodegeneration as Alzheimer’s disease, and therefore
treatment targeting Alzheimer’s would be ineffective in helping late-life
decline among patients who experienced TBI. Further work is needed to
characterize post-TBI neurodegeneration.
The lead investigator for this study is Paul Crane, MD, MPH,
Professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Washington School
of Medicine. Cleveland Clinic, University of Utah, Rush University Medical
Center and Group Health Research Institute also contributed to this research.
The National Institutes of Health and the Paul Allen Family
Foundation provided funding for the study.
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