The Delaware Gazette

Study links vets to brain disease seen in athletes

LAURAN NEERGAARD

AP Med­ical Writer

WASHINGTON — A small study raises more con­cern about the long-term con­se­quences of brain injuries suf­fered by thou­sands of sol­diers — sug­gest­ing they may be at risk of devel­op­ing the same degen­er­a­tive brain dis­ease as some retired foot­ball players.

Autop­sies of four young vet­er­ans found the ear­li­est signs of chronic trau­matic encephalopa­thy, or CTE, in their brain tis­sue, Boston researchers reported Wednesday.

They com­pared the brain tis­sue of some of the youngest ath­letes ever found with signs of early CTE, in their teens and 20s, and con­cluded the abnor­mal­i­ties were nearly identical.

“It’s very dis­tinc­tive,” said Dr. Lee Gold­stein of Boston Uni­ver­sity, who led the study with Dr. Ann McKee of the VA New Eng­land Health­care Sys­tem. “You don’t see this in nor­mal individuals.”

The research sug­gests that the cause of the injury, whether a blast or repeated blows, doesn’t mat­ter — it can trig­ger the same disease-causing process, said McKee, who has long stud­ied the ath­lete connection.

Fur­ther exper­i­ments with mice showed that a sin­gle blast, equiv­a­lent to a road­side bomb, was enough to start the dam­age — offer­ing a model to help sci­en­tists bet­ter under­stand these wounds and per­haps how to treat them, the team reported in the jour­nal Sci­ence Trans­la­tional Medicine.

CTE is a pro­gres­sive dis­ease linked to mul­ti­ple con­cus­sions. It has made head­lines in recent years with the deaths of some for­mer pro­fes­sional ath­letes, and law­suits filed against the National Foot­ball League by oth­ers wor­ried about the still unclear toll of a sport that can bring repeated blows to the head. Symp­toms include mem­ory prob­lems, behav­ior changes includ­ing aggres­sion, and even­tu­ally demen­tia. For now, only an autopsy con­firms a diagnosis.

Trau­matic brain injury, or TBI, is a sig­na­ture injury of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, most of them closed-head injuries caused by being near an explo­sion. While many recover fine, oth­ers have some last­ing cog­ni­tive or psy­chi­atric symp­toms — and tra­di­tional med­ical exams can’t see the dam­age, mak­ing it incred­i­bly dif­fi­cult to diag­nose what’s wrong. Addi­tion­ally, sci­en­tists have long warned that many of those vet­er­ans may be at risk of long-term prob­lems such as Alzheimer’s-like dementia.

Wednesday’s study, while very small, sheds impor­tant light on how dam­ag­ing those TBIs can be even if the per­son walks away from the blast.

The four young vet­er­ans, ages 22 to 45, lived for a year or longer after their mil­i­tary TBIs, but com­plained of prob­lems with mem­ory, irri­tabil­ity, sleep and other issues before dying of sui­cide or other causes. Gold­stein and McKee found their brains con­tained bro­ken axons, the nerve fibers that act as the brain’s tele­phone system.

More sur­pris­ing: Abnor­mal tan­gles of a brain pro­tein named tau are a hall­mark of early CTE, and researchers found that tau buildup in the brains of the vet­er­ans’ and the young ath­letes, three of them who played high school or col­lege foot­ball and the fourth a pro­fes­sional wrestler. They didn’t see it in the brains of four other young men who hadn’t expe­ri­enced con­cus­sions before death.

Three of the vet­er­ans had been exposed to blasts, while one had a dif­fer­ent kind of con­cus­sion while deployed — and all had had at least one pre-military con­cus­sion, from foot­ball, wrecks or fights.

While that begs the ques­tion of whether the blast was to blame, Gold­stein said the mouse study shows a sin­gle explo­sion could trig­ger that kind of dam­age. Wind from a sim­u­lated blast whipped the ani­mals’ heads like a bobble-head doll, severely shak­ing the brain, he explained. They expe­ri­enced bro­ken axons and blood ves­sels, inflam­ma­tion and prob­lems with learn­ing and mem­ory — and two weeks later, were form­ing abnor­mal tau.

When the ani­mals’ heads were immo­bi­lized, they escaped that dam­age, Gold­stein said.

He said hel­mets may be cru­cial in pro­tect­ing the skulls of sol­diers and ath­letes, but they can­not pro­tect the brain from that kind of rat­tling injury and might even worsen it by increas­ing the load on the neck.

Spe­cial­ists not con­nected to Wednesday’s study cau­tion that far more research is needed on the pos­si­ble link between this brain degen­er­a­tion and TBIs, espe­cially in veterans.

Still, “they are very impor­tant find­ings,” said TBI researcher Dr. Amy Wag­ner of the Uni­ver­sity of Pitts­burgh School of Medicine.

For abnor­mal­i­ties to begin so soon after injury trig­gers ques­tions about how resilient dif­fer­ent peo­ple are, she said: Who’s more likely to recover? How many blows are too many? What other fac­tors could make this slow-moving dis­ease even­tu­ally worsen?

A key next step will be for brain banks, which store donated brain tis­sue for research, to look more closely for CTE so sci­en­tists can learn how often it occurs and in whom, said neu­ro­sci­en­tist Dr. Sam Gandy of New York’s Mount Sinai School of Med­i­cine. He pre­dicts that peo­ple who carry genes linked to Alzheimer’s dis­ease would be more prone to last­ing dam­age from TBI. In an edi­to­r­ial in the same jour­nal on Wednes­day, he sug­gested study­ing if gene test­ing of would-be high school ath­letes or mil­i­tary recruits might one day help per­suade the most vul­ner­a­ble to avoid those occupations.

McKee said her lab so far has found evi­dence of CTE in more than 65 ath­letes and vet­er­ans, rang­ing from the early abnor­mal­i­ties to pro­found degen­er­a­tion. She now is research­ing how to diag­nose CTE before death, per­haps with brain scans or by mea­sur­ing tau in spinal fluid.

“This work raises a num­ber of ques­tions for researchers to explore in fur­ther stud­ies. In par­tic­u­lar, the ani­mal model devel­oped by the researchers will enable a bet­ter under­stand­ing of the brain pathol­ogy involved in blast injuries and ide­ally lead to new ther­a­pies to help ser­vice mem­bers and vet­er­ans with TBIs,” Dr. Joel Kuper­smith, research chief at the Depart­ment of Vet­er­ans Affairs, said in a statement.

AP News Posted by on May 16 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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