Abstract

AbstractBackgroundRepetitive head impacts (RHI) occur routinely in sports like American football (AmFootball) and are the most well‐established risk factor for chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a neurodegenerative tauopathy. However, RHI is not routinely evaluated in older adults with other suspected neurodegenerative diseases. The prevalence of RHI among older adults with neurodegenerative diseases and the influence on clinical symptoms is unknown.MethodsRHI was defined by AmFootball participation and analyzed based on frequency of any and “substantial” exposure (> 4 years). The Boston University Head Impact Exposure Assessment was administered to 195 older adult males at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center. Of these 106 (54%) were clinically normal (CN) participants in the Brain Aging Network for Cognitive Health (BRANCH) study and 89 (46%) were cognitively impaired participants from the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center. Diagnostic groups included AD‐related phenotypes (“clinAD”; amnestic‐predominant MCI/dementia, logopenic PPA; N = 26) and frontotemporal dementia spectrum conditions (“FTD”; behavioral variant FTD, semantic PPA, nonfluent PPA; N = 46). Our aims were: 1) investigate frequency of prior RHI between diagnostic groups (chi square), 2) compare age of symptom onset between participants with and without prior RHI (ANOVA), and 3) evaluate associations between RHI and cognition within the largest single diagnostic group (bvFTD N = 20; ANCOVA adjusted for age and education). Cohen’s d effect sizes are reported.ResultsMales with clinAD (27%; χ2 = 8.3, p = .009; d = 0.53) and FTD (21%; χ2 = 5.6, p = .02, d = 0.40) were more likely than CN (7%) to have had substantial prior RHI. Prior RHI was associated with younger age of symptom onset (62.1±7.6 vs. 56.7±7.7 years old; p = .001, d = 0.69). This effect was stronger within clinAD (63.1±7.2 vs. 53.3±7.5; d = 1.3) than FTD (60.1±7.0 vs. 55.9±6.0; d = 0.54). In participants with bvFTD, those with prior RHI scored significantly worse on memory testing (w‐scores ‐2.6±1.1 vs. ‐1.1±1.2, p = .02, d = 1.4).ConclusionsRHI through AmFootball is more common in AD and FTD than healthy controls. Prior RHI may contribute to variability in age of symptom onset in both AD and FTD. Exposure to RHI may also partly explain why some participants with bvFTD, a classically nonamnestic syndrome, develop memory decline. Prior RHI should be routinely evaluated in neurodegenerative disease workups.

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