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Traumatic brain injury alters neuropsychiatric symptomatology in all‐cause dementia

Michael J. C. Bray, Lisa N. Richey, Barry R. Bryant, Akshay Krieg, Sahar Jahed, William Tobolowsky, Christian LoBue, Matthew E. Peters

2021Alzheimer s & Dementia20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Traumatic brain injury (TBI) may alter the course of neuropsychiatric symptom (NPS) onset during dementia development. The connection among TBI, NPS, and dementia progression is of increasing interest to researchers and clinicians. Methods Incidence of NPS was examined in participants with normal cognition who progressed to all‐cause dementia based on whether TBI history was present (n = 130) or absent (n = 849). Survival analyses were used to examine NPS incidence across 7.6 ± 3.0 years of follow‐up. Results Participants with TBI history had increased prevalence and incidence of apathy (44.7% vs 29.9%, P = .0062; HR adj. = 1.708, P = .0018) and motor disturbances (17.2% vs 9.5%, P = .0458; HR adj. = 2.023, P = .0168), controlling for demographics and type of dementia diagnosis. Earlier anxiety onset was associated with TBI (692 days prior to dementia diagnosis vs 161 days, P = .0265). Discussion History of TBI is associated with increased risk for and earlier onset of NPS in the trajectory of dementia development.

Topics & Concepts

DementiaApathyIncidence (geometry)DemographicsTraumatic brain injuryMedicineAnxietyPsychiatryCognitionPsychologyInternal medicineDiseaseDemographySociologyPhysicsOpticsTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchTraumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances
Traumatic brain injury alters neuropsychiatric symptomatology in all‐cause dementia | Litcius