Abstract
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) has become a topic of considerable interest in recent years, with wide-ranging implications for athletes, military members, and other groups exposed to frequent concussive or subconcussive head trauma. The condition has been subject to intensive neuropathological characterization by various groups, with assessment methodologies and staging criteria proposed. Clinical characterization of symptoms has also been performed, but has not yet been definitively formalized. While efforts are underway to develop in vivo markers of tauopathies including CTE, these remain experimental at this time, necessitating postmortem analysis for definitive diagnosis. The putative link between development of cognitive and behavioral dysfunction and neuropathological findings of CTE may prompt requests for postmortem assessment in the forensic setting. Here, we review current concepts in CTE research, describe histopathological findings in CTE, and describe methodologies for pathological assessment of CTE which may be useful to the forensic pathologist.
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