Dementia risk has been correlated with traumatic brain injury. Sadly, the exact mechanisms causing this relationship are still unknown. It is difficult to establish preventative strategies to assist TBI patients because of this knowledge gap.
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks may be one of the mechanisms that connect traumatic brain injury (TBI) with dementia, according to a notion that was just published in Alzheimer's & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions, a journal of the Alzheimer's Association. CSF leaks are associated with decreasedbrainbuoyancy and the appearance ofbrainsagging onMRI. Severebrainsagging may cause symptoms that mimic those of a behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), a type of early-onset dementia. A recent publication by Schievink and colleagues found that a type of spinal CSF leak called CSF-venous fistula is common among patients with symptoms of bvFTD. Once identified through a specialized imaging technique known as digital subtraction myelography, surgical correction of the leak resulted in resolution of the dementia symptoms among all nine eligible patients in the study who had frontotemporalbrainsagging syndrome. When I read Schievink et al.s study, a light went off in my head, says senior author Professor Esme Fuller-Thomson, I wondered if these CSF leaks could be an important contributing factor in the well-established link between traumaticbraininjuryand dementia. The reason that this is so exciting is that if this hypothesis is true, it is possible that treating the leak may mitigate dementia symptoms in some patients with a history of TBI. Dr. Fuller-Thomson is the director of the University of Torontos Institute of Life Course and Aging and a Professor in the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and Department of Family and Community Medicine. CSF leaks are identified in around 1-3% of adults with a traumatic brain injury. Symptoms of severe CSF leaks include headache, disequilibrium, and hypersomnolence. While many CSF leaks may resolve on their own, larger leaks may require surgical ligation through a minimally invasive procedure. Identifying the source of CSF leaks can be difficult, but specialized imaging modalities, such as the digital subtraction myelography used by Schievink et al., may be helpful. We hope that other researchers are equally intrigued by the potential importance of CSF leaks in the association between TBI and dementia and that further research exploring this association will be conducted, says co-author Judy Deng, a pharmacist from the University of Toronto. Fuller-Thomson adds, This hypothesis is, of course, high speculative and we need much more research to determine if it holds any promise. (ANI)
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