Silverstein Steven M
Departments of Psychiatry, Neuroscience, and Ophthalmology, University of Rochester Medical Center , Rochester, NY 14642, USA.
Mil Med. 2024 Sep 18. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usae443.
Military personnel exposed to blasts receive repeated subconcussive head impacts. Although these events typically do not cause immediate symptoms and do not lead to medical evaluation, the cumulative effects of subconcussive impacts can be significant and can include postconcussive symptoms, changes in brain structure and function, long-term cognitive dysfunction, depression, and chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Retinal measures such as thickness of retinal neural layers, density of retinal microvasculature, and strength of retinal neuronal firing are associated with cognitive function and brain structure and function in healthy populations and in neurodegenerative disease cohorts, and changes over time in retinal indices predict cognitive decline and brain atrophy in longitudinal studies in a range of medical populations. This commentary highlights the potential benefits of using retinal biomarkers in the routine screening and monitoring of brain health in warfighters and veterans. Retinal measures can be rapidly acquired (often in a matter of seconds) using methods that are inexpensive and noninvasive, and they can be collected with movable and often portable equipment that uses automated scoring routines that can be used for prediction and decision-making at the individual level. To date, however, retinal biomarkers have not been included in studies of blast overpressure exposures in military personnel. Despite this, preclinical and human evidence suggests that they could be among the most effective methods for tracking central nervous system damage in people exposed to repeated blasts. Retinal biomarkers could also contribute to brief test batteries to determine who is most at risk for long-term negative effects of future exposures. In addition, the sensitivity of retinal indices to blast exposure and mild traumatic brain injury suggests that they should be incorporated into research on strategies to minimize or prevent blast-related short- and long-term central nervous system changes in blast-exposed military personnel.
暴露于爆炸中的军事人员会受到反复的次脑震荡性头部撞击。虽然这些事件通常不会立即引发症状,也不会导致医学评估,但次脑震荡性撞击的累积影响可能很大,可能包括脑震荡后症状、脑结构和功能变化、长期认知功能障碍、抑郁以及慢性创伤性脑病。视网膜测量指标,如视网膜神经层厚度、视网膜微血管密度和视网膜神经元放电强度,在健康人群和神经退行性疾病队列中与认知功能以及脑结构和功能相关,并且在一系列医学人群的纵向研究中,视网膜指标随时间的变化可预测认知能力下降和脑萎缩。本评论强调了在对战地士兵和退伍军人的脑健康进行常规筛查和监测时使用视网膜生物标志物的潜在益处。视网膜测量可以使用廉价且无创的方法快速获取(通常只需几秒钟),并且可以使用可移动且通常便于携带的设备进行收集,这些设备采用自动评分程序,可用于个体层面的预测和决策。然而,迄今为止,视网膜生物标志物尚未纳入军事人员爆炸超压暴露的研究中。尽管如此,临床前和人体研究证据表明,它们可能是追踪暴露于反复爆炸的人群中枢神经系统损伤的最有效方法之一。视网膜生物标志物还可以为简短测试组合做出贡献,以确定谁最有可能受到未来暴露的长期负面影响。此外,视网膜指标对爆炸暴露和轻度创伤性脑损伤的敏感性表明,它们应纳入旨在尽量减少或预防爆炸暴露军事人员爆炸相关短期和长期中枢神经系统变化的策略研究中。