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Lewy Body Pathology and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy Associated With Contact Sports

Authors :
Bobak Abdolmohammadi
Jesse Mez
Jason W. Adams
Patrick T. Kiernan
Alicia S. Chua
Sanford Auerbach
Brigid Dwyer
Christopher J. Nowinski
Victor E. Alvarez
Bertrand R. Huber
Robert C. Cantu
Caroline A. Kubilus
Yorghos Tripodis
Weiming Xia
Nurgul Aytan
Todd M. Solomon
Daniel H. Daneshvar
Douglas I. Katz
Laney Evers
Raymond Nicks
Robert S. Stern
Neil W. Kowall
Michael L. Alosco
Lee E. Goldstein
Gaoyuan Meng
Thor D. Stein
Jonathan D. Cherry
Kerry Cormier
Sherral Devine
Ann C. McKee
Rhoda Au
Sarah Svirsky
Ian Mahar
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2018.

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury has been associated with increased risk of Parkinson disease and parkinsonism, and parkinsonism and Lewy body disease (LBD) can occur with chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). To test whether contact sports and CTE are associated with LBD, we compared deceased contact sports athletes (n = 269) to cohorts from the community (n = 164) and the Boston University Alzheimer disease (AD) Center (n = 261). Participants with CTE and LBD were more likely to have β-amyloid deposition, dementia, and parkinsonism than CTE alone (p 8 years of play best predicted neocortical LBD (ROC analysis, OR = 6.24, 95% CI = 1.5–25, p = 0.011), adjusting for age, sex, and APOE ɛ4 allele status. Clinically, dementia was significantly associated with neocortical LBD, CTE stage, and AD; parkinsonism was associated with LBD pathology but not CTE stage. Contact sports participation may increase risk of developing neocortical LBD, and increased LBD frequency may partially explain extrapyramidal motor symptoms sometimes observed in CTE.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0a2e7cd012caa53a2a5a932b70327722