Abstract

Evidence suggests that a history of head trauma is associated with memory deficits later in life. The majority of previous research has focused on moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), but recent evidence suggests that even a mild TBI (mTBI) can interact with the aging process and produce reductions in memory performance. This study examined the association of mTBI with memory and the brain by comparing young and middle-aged adults who have had mTBI in their recent (several years ago) and remote (several decades ago) past, respectively, with control subjects on a face-scene relational memory paradigm while they underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Hippocampal volumes were also examined from high-resolution structural images. Results indicated middle-aged adults with a head injury in their remote past had impaired memory compared to gender, age, and education matched control participants, consistent with previous results in the study of memory, aging, and TBI. The present findings extended previous results by demonstrating that these individuals also had smaller bilateral hippocampi, and had reduced neural activity during memory performance in cortical regions important for memory retrieval. These results indicate that a history of mTBI may be one of the many factors that negatively influence cognitive and brain health in aging.

Highlights

  • A hallmark of cognitive aging is inter-individual variability, with some individuals in their seventh and eighth decades already experiencing Alzheimer’s disease while others continue to be productive in their careers

  • An important factor thought to affect brain and cognitive aging that we know relatively little about are the effects of a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI), as this may interact with aging processes to produce poorer outcomes (Moretti et al, 2012)

  • Planned comparisons revealed that this interaction was driven by the MI group having a significantly lower hit rate than the middle-aged control (MC) group, [t(18) = 2.37, p = 0.03], whereas there was no difference between the young groups [t(22) = 0.56, p = 0.58; Figure 2]

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Summary

Introduction

A hallmark of cognitive aging is inter-individual variability, with some individuals in their seventh and eighth decades already experiencing Alzheimer’s disease while others continue to be productive in their careers. To ascertain if the marginal interaction in the right hippocampus, and the main effects that occurred bilaterally, were due to the hypothesized combination of aging and mTBI, planned comparisons were performed contrasting the TBI history factor at each level of Age. For the right hippocampus, the observed effects were due to differences between the two middle-aged groups.

Results
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