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Complex link between head trauma and Alzheimer’s

Submitted by Fiona McPherson on

Studies linking head trauma with increased risk and earlier age of onset for Alzheimer's disease have yielded contradictory results. Now a population-based study involving 448 healthy older adults (70+) and 141 seniors with mild cognitive impairment has found that a history of head trauma was associated with higher levels of amyloid-beta plaques (a marker for Alzheimer’s) in those with MCI, but not in the cognitively normal. Similar rates of self-reported head trauma were found in the two groups (17% and 18%, respectively).

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-12/aaon-acr122013.php

Mielke, M. M., Savica, R., Wiste, H. J., Weigand, S. D., Vemuri, P., Knopman, D. S., … Jack, C. R. (2014). Head trauma and in vivo measures of amyloid and neurodegeneration in a population-based study. Neurology, 82(1), 70-76. Retrieved from http://www.neurology.org/content/82/1/70 (Original work published 2014)

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