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History of traumatic brain injury is associated with increased grey-matter loss in patients with mild cognitive impairment.

Authors :
Khoury, Marc A.
Churchill, Nathan W.
Di Battista, Alex
Graham, Simon J.
Symons, Sean
Troyer, Angela K.
Roberts, Angela
Kumar, Sanjeev
Tan, Brian
Arnott, Stephen R.
Ramirez, Joel
Tartaglia, Maria C.
Borrie, Michael
Pollock, Bruce
Rajji, Tarek K.
Pasternak, Stephen H.
Frank, Andrew
Tang-Wai, David F.
Scott, Christopher J. M.
Haddad, Seyyed Mohammad Hassan
Source :
Journal of Neurology; Jul2024, Vol. 271 Issue 7, p4540-4550, 11p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objectives: To investigate whether a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is associated with greater long-term grey-matter loss in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Methods: 85 patients with MCI were identified, including 26 with a previous history of traumatic brain injury (MCI[TBI-]) and 59 without (MCI[TBI+]). Cortical thickness was evaluated by segmenting T1-weighted MRI scans acquired longitudinally over a 2-year period. Bayesian multilevel modelling was used to evaluate group differences in baseline cortical thickness and longitudinal change, as well as group differences in neuropsychological measures of executive function. Results: At baseline, the MCI[TBI+] group had less grey matter within right entorhinal, left medial orbitofrontal and inferior temporal cortex areas bilaterally. Longitudinally, the MCI[TBI+] group also exhibited greater longitudinal declines in left rostral middle frontal, the left caudal middle frontal and left lateral orbitofrontal areas sover the span of 2 years (median = 1–2%, 90%HDI [−0.01%: −0.001%], probability of direction (PD) = 90–99%). The MCI[TBI+] group also displayed greater longitudinal declines in Trail-Making-Test (TMT)-derived ratio (median: 0.737%, 90%HDI: [0.229%: 1.31%], PD = 98.8%) and differences scores (median: 20.6%, 90%HDI: [−5.17%: 43.2%], PD = 91.7%). Conclusions: Our findings support the notion that patients with MCI and a history of TBI are at risk of accelerated neurodegeneration, displaying greatest evidence for cortical atrophy within the left middle frontal and lateral orbitofrontal frontal cortex. Importantly, these results suggest that long-term TBI-mediated atrophy is more pronounced in areas vulnerable to TBI-related mechanical injury, highlighting their potential relevance for diagnostic forms of intervention in TBI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03405354
Volume :
271
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178340965
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-024-12369-2