Abstract
This study examined the frequency of chronic traumatic encephalopathy-neuropathologic change (CTE-NC) and aging-related tau astrogliopathy (ARTAG) in community-dwelling older adults and tested the hypothesis that these tau pathologies are associated with a history of moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (msTBI), defined as a TBI with loss of consciousness >30 minutes. We evaluated CTE-NC, ARTAG, and Alzheimer disease pathologies in 94 participants with msTBI and 94 participants without TBI matched by age, sex, education, and dementia status TBI from the Rush community-based cohorts. Six (3%) of brains showed the pathognomonic lesion of CTE-NC; only 3 of these had a history of msTBI. In contrast, ARTAG was common in older brains (gray matter ARTAG ¼ 77%; white matter ARTAG ¼ 54%; subpial ARTAG ¼ 51%); there were no differences in severity, type, or distribution of ARTAG pathology with respect to history of msTBI. Furthermore, those with msTBI did not have higher levels of PHF-tau tangles density but had higher levels of amyloid-b load (Estimate ¼ 0.339, SE ¼ 0.164, p ¼ 0.040). These findings suggest that CTE-NC is infrequent while ARTAG is common in the community and that both pathologies are unrelated to msTBI. The association of msTBI with amyloid-b, rather than with tauopathies suggests differential mechanisms of neurodegeneration in msTBI.
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Agrawal, S., Leurgans, S. E., Barnes, L. L., Dams-O’Connor, K., Mez, J., Bennett, D. A., & Schneider, J. A. (2024). Chronic traumatic encephalopathy and aging-related tau astrogliopathy in community-dwelling older persons with and without moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury. Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 83(3), 181–193. https://doi.org/10.1093/jnen/nlae007
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