Carr Walter, Yarnell Angela M, Ong Ricardo, Walilko Timothy, Kamimori Gary H, da Silva Uade, McCarron Richard M, LoPresti Matthew L
Center for Military Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research , Silver Spring, MD , USA.
U.S. Army Special Forces Command , Fort Bragg, NC , USA.
Front Neurol. 2015 Mar 16;6:49. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00049. eCollection 2015.
Repeated exposure to low-level blast is a characteristic of a few select occupations and there is concern that such occupational exposures present risk for traumatic brain injury. These occupations include specialized military and law enforcement units that employ controlled detonation of explosive charges for the purpose of tactical entry into secured structures. The concern for negative effects from blast exposure is based on rates of operator self-reported headache, sleep disturbance, working memory impairment, and other concussion-like symptoms. A challenge in research on this topic has been the need for improved assessment tools to empirically evaluate the risk associated with repeated exposure to blast overpressure levels commonly considered to be too low in magnitude to cause acute injury. Evaluation of serum-based neurotrauma biomarkers provides an objective measure that is logistically feasible for use in field training environments. Among candidate biomarkers, ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase-L1 (UCH-L1) has some empirical support and was evaluated in this study. We used daily blood draws to examine acute change in UCH-L1 among 108 healthy military personnel who were exposed to repeated low-level blast across a 2-week period. These research volunteers also wore pressure sensors to record blast exposures, wrist actigraphs to monitor sleep patterns, and completed daily behavioral assessments of symptomology, postural stability, and neurocognitive function. UCH-L1 levels were elevated as a function of participating in the 2-week training with explosives, but the correlation of UCH-L1 elevation and blast magnitude was weak and inconsistent. Also, UCH-L1 elevations did not correlate with deficits in behavioral measures. These results provide some support for including UCH-L1 as a measure of central nervous system effects from exposure to low-level blast. However, the weak relation observed suggests that additional indicators of blast effect are needed.
反复暴露于低强度爆炸是少数特定职业的特点,人们担心这种职业暴露会带来创伤性脑损伤风险。这些职业包括特种军事和执法单位,它们通过控制爆炸物引爆来战术性进入安全建筑。对爆炸暴露负面影响的担忧基于操作人员自我报告的头痛、睡眠障碍、工作记忆受损及其他类似脑震荡症状的发生率。该主题研究面临的一个挑战是需要改进评估工具,以实证评估与反复暴露于通常被认为强度过低而不会导致急性损伤的爆炸超压水平相关的风险。基于血清的神经创伤生物标志物评估提供了一种客观测量方法,在野外训练环境中使用在后勤上是可行的。在候选生物标志物中,泛素羧基末端水解酶-L1(UCH-L1)有一些实证支持,本研究对其进行了评估。我们通过每日采血来检查108名健康军事人员在为期2周的反复低强度爆炸暴露期间UCH-L1的急性变化。这些研究志愿者还佩戴压力传感器记录爆炸暴露情况,佩戴手腕活动记录仪监测睡眠模式,并完成症状、姿势稳定性和神经认知功能的每日行为评估。UCH-L1水平随着参与为期2周的炸药训练而升高,但UCH-L1升高与爆炸强度的相关性较弱且不一致。此外,UCH-L1升高与行为测量指标的缺陷无关。这些结果为将UCH-L1作为低强度爆炸暴露对中枢神经系统影响的一项测量指标提供了一些支持。然而,观察到的微弱关系表明还需要其他爆炸影响指标。