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Association of remote mild traumatic brain injury with cortical amyloid burden in clinically normal older adults

机译:Association of remote mild traumatic brain injury with cortical amyloid burden in clinically normal older adults

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We investigated whether clinically normal older adults with remote, mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) show evidence of higher cortical A beta burden. Our study included 134 clinically normal older adults (age 74.1 +/- 6.8 years, 59.7% female, 85.8% white) who underwent A beta positron emission tomography (A beta-PET) and who completed the Ohio State University Traumatic Brain Injury Identification questionnaire. We limited participants to those reporting injuries classified as mTBI. A subset (N = 30) underwent a second A beta-PET scan (mean 2.7 years later). We examined the effect of remote mTBI on A beta-PET burden, interactions between remote mTBI and age, sex, and APOE status, longitudinal A beta accumulation, and the interaction between remote mTBI and A beta burden on memory and executive functioning. Of 134 participants, 48 (36%) reported remote mTBI (0, N = 86; 1, N = 31, 2+, N = 17; mean 37 +/- 23 years since last mTBI). Effect size estimates were small to negligible for the association of remote mTBI with A beta burden (p = .94, eta(2) < 0.01), and for all interaction analyses. Longitudinally, we found a non-statistically significant association of those with remote mTBI (N = 11) having a faster rate of A beta accumulation (B = 0.01, p = .08) than those without (N = 19). There was no significant interaction between remote mTBI and A beta burden on cognition. In clinically normal older adults, history of mTBI is not associated with greater cortical A beta burden and does not interact with A beta burden to impact cognition. Longitudinal analyses suggest remote mTBI may be associated with more rapid cortical A beta accumulation. This finding warrants further study in larger and more diverse samples with well-characterized lifelong head trauma exposure.

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