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Journal Article

Citation

Roy MJ, Costanzo M, Gill J, Leaman S, Law W, Ndiongue R, Taylor P, Kim HS, Bieler GS, Garge N, Rapp PE, Keyser D, Nathan D, Xydakis M, Pham D, Wassermann E. Cureus 2015; 7(7): e293.

Affiliation

Behavioral Neurology Unit, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Curēus)

DOI

10.7759/cureus.293

PMID

26251769

PMCID

PMC4524772

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury, depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are neurocognitive syndromes often associated with impairment of physical and mental health, as well as functional status. These syndromes are also frequent in military service members (SMs) after combat, although their presentation is often delayed until months after their return. The objective of this prospective cohort study was the identification of independent predictors of neurocognitive syndromes upon return from deployment could facilitate early intervention to prevent disability. We completed a comprehensive baseline assessment, followed by serial evaluations at three, six, and 12 months, to assess for new-onset PTSD, depression, or postconcussive syndrome (PCS) in order to identify baseline factors most strongly associated with subsequent neurocognitive syndromes. On serial follow-up, seven participants developed at least one neurocognitive syndrome: five with PTSD, one with depression and PTSD, and one with PCS. On univariate analysis, 60 items were associated with syndrome development at p < 0.15. Decision trees and ensemble tree multivariate models yielded four common independent predictors of PTSD: right superior longitudinal fasciculus tract volume on MRI; resting state connectivity between the right amygdala and left superior temporal gyrus (BA41/42) on functional MRI; and single nucleotide polymorphisms in the genes coding for myelin basic protein as well as brain-derived neurotrophic factor. Our findings require follow-up studies with greater sample size and suggest that neuroimaging and molecular biomarkers may help distinguish those at high risk for post-deployment neurocognitive syndromes.


Language: en

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