James, Sarah-Naomi; Nicholas, Jennifer M; Lane, Christopher A; Parker, Thomas D; Lu, Kirsty; Keshavan, Ashvini; Buchanan, Sarah M; Keuss, Sarah E; Murray-Smith, Heidi; Wong, Andrew; +16 more... Cash, David M; Malone, Ian B; Barnes, Josephine; Sudre, Carole H; Coath, William; Prosser, Lloyd; Ourselin, Sebastien; Modat, Marc; Thomas, David L; Cardoso, Jorge; Heslegrave, Amanda; Zetterberg, Henrik; Crutch, Sebastian J; Schott, Jonathan M; Richards, Marcus; Fox, Nick C; (2021) A population-based study of head injury, cognitive function and pathological markers. Annals of clinical and translational neurology, 8 (4). pp. 842-856. ISSN 2328-9503 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/acn3.51331
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess associations between head injury (HI) with loss of consciousness (LOC), ageing and markers of later-life cerebral pathology; and to explore whether those effects may help explain subtle cognitive deficits in dementia-free individuals. METHODS: Participants (n = 502, age = 69-71) from the 1946 British Birth Cohort underwent cognitive testing (subtests of Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite), 18 F-florbetapir Aβ-PET and MR imaging. Measures include Aβ-PET status, brain, hippocampal and white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volumes, normal appearing white matter (NAWM) microstructure, Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related cortical thickness, and serum neurofilament light chain (NFL). LOC HI metrics include HI occurring: (i) >15 years prior to the scan (ii) anytime up to age 71. RESULTS: Compared to those with no evidence of an LOC HI, only those reporting an LOC HI>15 years prior (16%, n = 80) performed worse on cognitive tests at age 69-71, taking into account premorbid cognition, particularly on the digit-symbol substitution test (DSST). Smaller brain volume (BV) and adverse NAWM microstructural integrity explained 30% and 16% of the relationship between HI and DSST, respectively. We found no evidence that LOC HI was associated with Aβ load, hippocampal volume, WMH volume, AD-related cortical thickness or NFL (all p > 0.01). INTERPRETATION: Having a LOC HI aged 50's and younger was linked with lower later-life cognitive function at age ~70 than expected. This may reflect a damaging but small impact of HI; explained in part by smaller BV and different microstructure pathways but not via pathology related to AD (amyloid, hippocampal volume, AD cortical thickness) or ongoing neurodegeneration (serum NFL).
Item Type | Article |
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Faculty and Department | Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Medical Statistics |
PubMed ID | 33694298 |
Elements ID | 157753 |
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