Center for Neurotechnology and Neurorecovery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114.
Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 May 7;121(19):e2313568121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2313568121. Epub 2024 Apr 22.
United States (US) Special Operations Forces (SOF) are frequently exposed to explosive blasts in training and combat, but the effects of repeated blast exposure (RBE) on SOF brain health are incompletely understood. Furthermore, there is no diagnostic test to detect brain injury from RBE. As a result, SOF personnel may experience cognitive, physical, and psychological symptoms for which the cause is never identified, and they may return to training or combat during a period of brain vulnerability. In 30 active-duty US SOF, we assessed the relationship between cumulative blast exposure and cognitive performance, psychological health, physical symptoms, blood proteomics, and neuroimaging measures (Connectome structural and diffusion MRI, 7 Tesla functional MRI, [C]PBR28 translocator protein [TSPO] positron emission tomography [PET]-MRI, and [F]MK6240 tau PET-MRI), adjusting for age, combat exposure, and blunt head trauma. Higher blast exposure was associated with increased cortical thickness in the left rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC), a finding that remained significant after multiple comparison correction. In uncorrected analyses, higher blast exposure was associated with worse health-related quality of life, decreased functional connectivity in the executive control network, decreased TSPO signal in the right rACC, and increased cortical thickness in the right rACC, right insula, and right medial orbitofrontal cortex-nodes of the executive control, salience, and default mode networks. These observations suggest that the rACC may be susceptible to blast overpressure and that a multimodal, network-based diagnostic approach has the potential to detect brain injury associated with RBE in active-duty SOF.
美国(US)特种作战部队(SOF)在训练和战斗中经常接触爆炸冲击,但重复爆炸暴露(RBE)对 SOF 大脑健康的影响尚不完全清楚。此外,没有诊断测试可以检测到 RBE 引起的脑损伤。因此,SOF 人员可能会出现认知、身体和心理症状,但原因从未确定,他们可能会在大脑脆弱期间返回训练或战斗。在 30 名现役美国 SOF 中,我们评估了累积爆炸暴露与认知表现、心理健康、身体症状、血液蛋白质组学和神经影像学测量(连接组结构和扩散 MRI、7 特斯拉功能 MRI、[C]PBR28 转位蛋白[TSPO]正电子发射断层扫描[PET]-MRI 和 [F]MK6240 tau PET-MRI)之间的关系,调整了年龄、战斗暴露和钝性头部创伤的影响。较高的爆炸暴露与左侧额前扣带皮质(rACC)的皮质厚度增加有关,在多次比较校正后,这一发现仍然具有统计学意义。在未经校正的分析中,较高的爆炸暴露与较差的健康相关生活质量、执行控制网络的功能连接减少、右侧 rACC 中的 TSPO 信号减少以及右侧 rACC、右侧岛叶和右侧内侧眶额皮层-执行控制、突显和默认模式网络的节点的皮质厚度增加有关。这些观察结果表明,rACC 可能容易受到爆炸超压的影响,并且基于多模态、网络的诊断方法有可能检测到现役 SOF 中与 RBE 相关的脑损伤。