Abstract

To investigate whether a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is associated with greater long-term grey-matter loss in patients with mild cognitive impairment(MCI). 85 patients with MCI were identified, including 26 with a previous history of traumatic brain injury (MCI[TBI-]) and 59 without (MCI[TBI+]). Cortical thickness was evaluated by segmenting T1-weighted MRI scans acquired longitudinally over a 2-year period. Bayesian multilevel modelling was used to evaluate group differences inbaseline cortical thickness and longitudinalchange, as well as group differences in neuropsychological measures of executive function. At baseline, theMCI[TBI+] group had less grey matter within right entorhinal, left medial orbitofrontal and inferior temporal cortexareas bilaterally. Longitudinally, theMCI[TBI+] group also exhibited greater longitudinal declines in left rostral middle frontal, the left caudal middle frontal and left lateral orbitofrontalareas sover the span of 2years (median = 1-2%, 90%HDI [-0.01%: -0.001%], probability of direction(PD) = 90-99%). The MCI[TBI+] group also displayedgreater longitudinal declines in Trail-Making-Test (TMT)-derived ratio (median: 0.737%, 90%HDI: [0.229%: 1.31%], PD = 98.8%) and differences scores (median: 20.6%, 90%HDI: [-5.17%: 43.2%], PD = 91.7%). Our findings support the notion that patients with MCI and a history of TBI are at risk of accelerated neurodegeneration, displayinggreatest evidence for cortical atrophy within the left middle frontal and lateral orbitofrontal frontal cortex. Importantly, these results suggest that long-term TBI-mediated atrophy is more pronounced in areas vulnerable to TBI-related mechanical injury, highlighting their potential relevance for diagnostic forms of intervention in TBI.

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