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RESEARCH: BRAIN-INJURED WAR VETS SHOW FASTER
DECLINE IN COGNITIVE FUNCTIONING AS THEY AGE -- A
study of
Vietnam war vets who suffered brain injuries
during the conflict has
found that the men show a faster decline in their
cognitive
functioning as they grow older than vets without
such injuries.

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Story here...
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-12/oup-bwv121707.php
Story below:
-------------------------
Contact: Dr. Jordan Grafman
grafmanj@ninds.nih.gov
Oxford University Press
Brain-injured war veterans show a faster decline in cognitive functioning
as they age
A study of Vietnam war veterans who suffered brain injuries during the
conflict has found that the men show a faster decline in their cognitive
functioning as they grow older than veterans without such injuries.
Published online today (Wednesday 19 December) in the journal Brain [1],
the study has found that the rate of decline can be predicted by how
intelligent the veterans were before they were injured, their level of
education, the size and location of the injury, and certain genetic
markers that have been linked to brain injury and neurodegeneration.
Greater intelligence and a higher level of education before the injury was
sustained were associated with a lesser decline in cognitive functioning
in the years afterwards.
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Dr Jordan Grafman, one of the authors of the
study, says that governments need to bear these findings in mind,
particularly in the light of the head injuries being sustained in the
on-going conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. “Nearly two-thirds of injured
US soldiers sent from Iraq to the US army medical center have been
diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries,” he said. “The additional burden
of accelerated cognitive decline to brain-injured veterans should be
considered when estimating their future healthcare needs. These veterans
would benefit from life-long care by neurologists and specialists in head
injury. Particularly as they age, given their injury, they may have
greater needs than others and the healthcare system, if prepared for this,
can essentially shadow these soldiers.
“Clinicians treating veterans with brain injuries should evaluate any
changes in their neurobehavioural status carefully so as not to confuse an
exacerbated decline in function with dementia.” [2]
Dr Grafman, the senior investigator in the Cognitive Neuroscience Section
at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National
Institute of Health, Maryland, USA, and his colleagues studied a group of
Vietnam veterans with penetrating head injury (PHI) 36-39 years after the
injury. The veterans were part of the Vietnam Head Injury Study, a
prospective follow-up study of about 2,000 Vietnam veterans that has been
running since 1967. This most recent report is on the third phase of the
study, and it looks at a total of 199 veterans who are now in their mid to
late 50s.
The researchers used the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT) as the
means of measuring intelligence. The men would have taken the test at the
time they joined the armed forces, giving a baseline against which
subsequent test scores could be measured. It has a range from 0-100.
By the time of the third phase of the study, men with head injuries had a
median average AFQT score of 54, while a control group of Vietnam veterans
without head injuries had an average score of 74. When the researchers
looked at the rate of decline between the second phase of the study
(carried out between 1981-1984) and the third phase, they found a faster
rate of decline in the brain injured group: the AFQT score declined by an
average of seven in the men with head injuries and four in the control
group.
However, when the researchers analysed the results more closely they found
that a higher AFQT score and a higher level of education before the injury
were both significant predictors of a slower decline in post-injury
cognitive decline up to phase two of the study, but at phase three, only a
higher preinjury AFQT score was protective in terms of later decline.
“Greater levels of preinjury intelligence were associated with lesser
decline in long term AFQT scores,” said Dr Grafman. “A higher AFQT score
before injury acted in a protective manner and even predicted a higher
AFQT score over 30 years after the PHI. Change in AFQT score in the first
two decades after the injury was most associated with preinjury
intelligence, and to a lesser extent educational duration. Thus, it
appears that educational level has an impact earlier in the process of
recovery from head injury. However, AFQT score prior to injury remained
the greatest forecaster of overall cognitive outcome in the study’s third
phase, almost four decades after PHI.”
He believes that greater intelligence is an indicator of the brain’s
ability to establish multiple neural connections and that this enables the
brain to recover better from injury. “In essence, the more you dive into
intellectual pursuits, the richer the intra- and inter-connectivity in a
brain region leading to greater protection following brain damage,” he
explained.
When the researchers looked at the size and position of the brain injury
they found that the size (measured as total volume loss by a CT scan) was
associated with a decline in intelligence in the earlier phases of the
study, and if the left ventricle and right frontal regions of the brain
were injured, this also caused a greater decline in intelligence by phase
three of study.
They investigated the links between genetic markers and cognitive decline
and found that one marker, a receptor for a glutamate neurotransmitter
(called GRIN2A), did predict the change in intelligence over the years.
GRIN2A is linked to the age of onset of Huntingdon’s Disease and to the
brain’s ability to re-establish neural connections. Dr Grafman said: “This
is the first study to examine genetic factors in the long term outcome
following PHI and it suggests that genetic markers may play a small but
significant role in different stages of cognitive recovery or decline
after head injury. This is an interesting but tentative result, which
requires further investigation to establish its significance both in terms
of degree and timing of its impact following a head injury.”
He said the decline in cognitive functioning seen in the head injured
veterans could mean that they might have to take early retirement from
employment and might be less able to manage domestic responsibilities.
However, the research could be useful for the men, their families and
their doctors. “By telling patients and their families that later in life
they will be at risk for a more rapid decline in certain abilities
compared to unimpaired individuals can be difficult to hear,” he said.
“But it can be helpful in terms of long term planning and, potentially,
practices could be developed that might protect against it, like staying
physically fit and intellectually active.”
###
[1] Demographic, structural and genetic predictors of late cognitive
decline after penetrating head injury. Brain. doi:10.1093/brain/awm300
[2] The researchers stress that penetrating head injury (PHI) is a
different type of brain injury to blast injuries, which are also being
experienced in current conflicts. Little is known about the long term
effects of blast injuries and further research needs to be carried out on
this.
Notes:
The Brain journal website is:
http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/
Please acknowledge Brain as a source
Oxford University Press [ www.oup.com ] (OUP),
a department of the University of Oxford, is the world's largest and most
international university press. Founded in 1478, it currently publishes
more than 4,500 new books a year, has a presence in over fifty countries,
and employs some 3,700 people worldwide. It has become familiar to
millions through a diverse publishing programme that includes scholarly
works in all academic disciplines, bibles, music, school and college
textbooks, children's books, materials for teaching English as a foreign
language, business books, dictionaries and reference books, and journals.
Read more about OUP at
www.oup.com/about/
Oxford Journals [
www.oxfordjournals.org ], a Division of OUP, publishes over 200
journals covering a broad range of subject areas, two-thirds of which are
published in collaboration with learned societies and other international
organizations. The collection contains some of the world's most
prestigious titles, including Nucleic Acids Research, JNCI (Journal of the
National Cancer Institute), Brain, Human Reproduction, English Historical
Review, and the Review of Financial Studies. Read more about Oxford
Journals at
www.oxfordjournals.org/about_us
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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