Examining Alzheimer’s Disease Blood‐Based Biomarkers and Cognition Among Non‐Hispanic White and Mexican Americans After Traumatic Brain Injury
Background There is limited evidence on the relationship of traumatic brain injury with loss of consciousness (TBI‐LOC) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) blood‐based biomarkers in relation to cognition. This research has predominantly examined associations among non‐Hispanic White (NHW) male service memb...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Alzheimer's & dementia 2022-12, Vol.18 (S7), p.n/a |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
There is limited evidence on the relationship of traumatic brain injury with loss of consciousness (TBI‐LOC) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) blood‐based biomarkers in relation to cognition. This research has predominantly examined associations among non‐Hispanic White (NHW) male service members and veterans, which limits generalizability to ethnically diverse community‐dwelling individuals. This study evaluated cognition in relation to TBI‐LOC in a NHW and Mexican American (MA) sample from Dallas‐Fort Worth, Texas in the United States.
Method
Data were obtained from the Health and Aging Brain Study – Health Disparities. Excluding participants with failed performance validity testing, evidence of alcohol use disorder, severe anxiety/depression, and a history of stroke or seizures, we estimated a cognitive composite using principal component analysis of the cognitive test battery. The remaining sample (n = 899) enabled baseline comparison of those with and without TBI‐LOC, before examining cognition within the TBI‐LOC group (n = 134, mean age(range) = 66.69±7.10(50‐87), mean education = 12.96±4.74, 41% female, 24.6% MA Spanish‐speaking). Multiple regression model comparisons explained variance in cognition by sociodemographic factors (age, gender, education, ethnicity/language), AD blood‐based biomarkers (Aβ42/Aβ40, Tau, Neurofilament light), and TBI‐LOC variables. TBI‐LOC variables included TBIs with loss of consciousness >30 minutes, age at first TBI‐LOC, and longest period of unconsciousness after TBI, scored by the Ohio State University TBI Identification Method.
Result
The TBI‐LOC group did not differ from the non‐TBI‐LOC group across age, education, ethnicity/language, CDR status, or cognition (ps > 0.05); they did differ by gender where the TBI‐LOC group was 59% male compared to 42.4% in the non‐TBI‐LOC group (p |
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ISSN: | 1552-5260 1552-5279 |
DOI: | 10.1002/alz.068084 |