Traumatic Brain Injury Characteristics Are Not Related to Neurocognitive Decline in Older Adults: A Nationwide Longitudinal Cohort Study

Author:

Schaffert Jeff1ORCID,LoBue Christian2ORCID,Chiang Hsueh-Sheng34ORCID,Peters Matthew E5ORCID,Hart Jr John46ORCID,Cullum C Munro78ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, UT Southwestern Medical Center , Dallas, TX 75390 , USA

2. Departments of Psychiatry and Neurological Surgery, UT Southwestern Medical Center , Dallas, TX 75390 , USA

3. Department of Neurology, UT Southwestern Dallas Medical Center , Dallas, TX 75390 , USA

4. School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas , Richardson, TX 75080 , USA

5. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore, MD 21287 , USA

6. Departments of Neurology and Psychiatry, UT Southwestern Medical Center , Dallas, TX 75390 , USA

7. Departments of Psychiatry , Neurology, and Neurological Surgery, , Dallas, TX 75390 , USA

8. UT Southwestern Medical Center , Neurology, and Neurological Surgery, , Dallas, TX 75390 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objective Evaluate whether traumatic brain injury (TBI) characteristics, age of injury, or recency of injury predicts the course of neurocognitive decline and/or increases conversion rates to mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia. Methods Data were obtained from the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center for participants 50–85 years old with 3–5 visits from 2015 to 2022, with or without TBI history (TBI+ = 508; TBI− = 2,382). Groups were stratified by self-reported TBI history (i.e., single TBI without loss of consciousness [LOC], single TBI with LOC, multiple TBI without LOC, and multiple TBI with LOC), age of most recent TBI, and recency of TBI. Mixed linear models compared neuropsychological composite trajectories (executive functioning/attention/speed, language, memory, and global), co-varying for age, gender, education, apolipoprotein E4 status, race/ethnicity, and baseline diagnosis (normal aging n = 1,720, MCI n = 749, or dementia n = 417). Logistic binary regression examined MCI/dementia conversion rates. Results There was a slightly higher frequency of MCI/dementia in those with multiple TBIs (50% to 60% with and without LOC, compared to 39% with no TBI) at baseline, but longitudinal trajectories were similar. TBI history, age of injury, or recency of injury did not impact neurocognitive trajectories or conversion rates to MCI/dementia (all p’s > .01). Conclusions TBI history, regardless of injury characteristics, age of injury, or recency of injury, did not worsen neurocognitive decline or MCI/dementia conversion. Additional longitudinal research in more diverse cohorts with a wider range of TBI severity is needed to evaluate the specific factors and possible mechanisms in which TBI may increase dementia risk.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference22 articles.

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2. Association of mild traumatic brain injury with and without loss of consciousness with dementia in US military veterans;Barnes;JAMA Neurology,2018

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