From the Journals

New Clues on How Blast Exposure May Lead to Alzheimer’s Disease


 

In October 2023, Robert Card — a grenade instructor in the Army Reserve — shot and killed 18 people in Maine, before turning the gun on himself. As reported by The New York Times, his family said that he had become increasingly erratic and violent during the months before the rampage.

A postmortem conducted by the Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) Center at Boston University found “significant evidence of traumatic brain injuries” [TBIs] and “significant degeneration, axonal and myelin loss, inflammation, and small blood vessel injury” in the white matter, the center’s director, Ann McKee, MD, said in a press release. “These findings align with our previous studies on the effects of blast injury in humans and experimental models.”

Members of the military, such as Mr. Card, are exposed to blasts from repeated firing of heavy weapons not only during combat but also during training.

New data suggest that repeated blast exposure may impair the brain’s waste clearance system, leading to biomarker changes indicative of preclinical Alzheimer’s disease 20 years earlier than typical. A higher index of suspicion for dementia or Alzheimer’s disease may be warranted in patients with a history of blast exposure or subconcussive brain injury who present with cognitive issues, according to experts interviewed.

In 2022, the US Department of Defense (DOD) launched its Warfighter Brain Health Initiative with the aim of “optimizing service member brain health and countering traumatic brain injuries.”

In April 2024, the Blast Overpressure Safety Act was introduced in the Senate to require the DOD to enact better blast screening, tracking, prevention, and treatment. The DOD initiated 26 blast overpressure studies.

Heather Snyder, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association vice president of Medical and Scientific Relations, said that an important component of that research involves “the need to study the difference between TBI-caused dementia and dementia caused independently” and “the need to study biomarkers to better understand the long-term consequences of TBI.”

What Is the Underlying Biology?

Dr. Snyder was the lead author of a white paper produced by the Alzheimer’s Association in 2018 on military-related risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. “There is a lot of work trying to understand the effect of pure blast waves on the brain, as opposed to the actual impact of the injury,” she said.

The white paper speculated that blast exposure may be analogous to subconcussive brain injury in athletes where there are no obvious immediate clinical symptoms or neurological dysfunction but which can cause cumulative injury and functional impairment over time.

“We are also trying to understand the underlying biology around brain changes, such as accumulation of tau and amyloid and other specific markers related to brain changes in Alzheimer’s disease,” said Dr. Snyder, chair of the Peer Reviewed Alzheimer’s Research Program Programmatic Panel for Alzheimer’s Disease/Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias and TBI.

Common Biomarker Signatures

A recent study in Neurology comparing 51 veterans with mild TBI (mTBI) with 85 veterans and civilians with no lifetime history of TBI is among the first to explore these biomarker changes in human beings.

“Our findings suggest that chronic neuropathologic processes associated with blast mTBI share properties in common with pathogenic processes that are precursors to Alzheimer’s disease onset,” said coauthor Elaine R. Peskind, MD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, University of Washington, Seattle.

The largely male participants were a mean age of 34 years and underwent standardized clinical and neuropsychological testing as well as lumbar puncture to collect cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The mTBI group had experienced at least one war zone blast or combined blast/impact that met criteria for mTBI, but 91% had more than one blast mTBI, and the study took place over 13 years.

The researchers found that the mTBI group “had biomarker signatures in common with the earliest stages of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Dr. Peskind.

For example, at age 50, they had lower mean levels of CSF amyloid beta 42 (Abeta42), the earliest marker of brain parenchymal Abeta deposition, compared with the control group (154 pg/mL and 1864 pg/mL lower, respectively).

High CSF phosphorylated tau181 (p-tau181) and total tau are established biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease. However, levels of these biomarkers remained “relatively constant with age” in participants with mTBI but were higher in older ages for the non-TBI group.

The mTBI group also showed worse cognitive performance at older ages (P < .08). Poorer verbal memory and verbal fluency performance were associated with lower CSF Abeta42 in older participants (P ≤ .05).

In Alzheimer’s disease, a reduction in CSF Abeta42 may occur up to 20 years before the onset of clinical symptoms, according to Dr. Peskind. “But what we don’t know from this study is what this means, as total tau protein and p-tau181 in the CSF were also low, which isn’t entirely typical in the picture of preclinical Alzheimer’s disease,” she said. However, changes in total tau and p-tau181 lag behind changes in Abeta42.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Lecanemab’s Promise and Peril: Alzheimer’s Treatment Dilemma
MDedge Neurology
Does Racism in Black Americans Boost Alzheimer’s Risk?
MDedge Neurology
Ultraprocessed Foods May Be an Independent Risk Factor for Poor Brain Health
MDedge Neurology
Irisin Shows Potential as Alzheimer’s Disease Biomarker
MDedge Neurology
Early Memory Problems Linked to Increased Tau
MDedge Neurology
Antidepressants and Dementia Risk: New Data
MDedge Neurology
Novel Method Able to Predict if, When, Dementia Will Develop
MDedge Neurology
Selective Attention
MDedge Neurology
Intensive Lifestyle Changes May Counter Early Alzheimer’s Symptoms
MDedge Neurology
Vision Impairment Tied to Higher Dementia Risk in Older Adults
MDedge Neurology