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Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers

Combat military and civilian law enforcement personnel may be exposed to repetitive low-intensity blast events during training and operations. Persons who use explosives to gain entry (i.e., breach) into buildings are known as “breachers” or dynamic entry personnel. Breachers operate under the guida...

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Autores principales: Stone, James R., Avants, Brian B., Tustison, Nicholas J., Wassermann, Eric M., Gill, Jessica, Polejaeva, Elena, Dell, Kristine C., Carr, Walter, Yarnell, Angela M., LoPresti, Matthew L., Walker, Peter, O'Brien, Meghan, Domeisen, Natalie, Quick, Alycia, Modica, Claire M., Hughes, John D., Haran, Francis. J., Goforth, Carl, Ahlers, Stephen T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32928028
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2020.7141
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author Stone, James R.
Avants, Brian B.
Tustison, Nicholas J.
Wassermann, Eric M.
Gill, Jessica
Polejaeva, Elena
Dell, Kristine C.
Carr, Walter
Yarnell, Angela M.
LoPresti, Matthew L.
Walker, Peter
O'Brien, Meghan
Domeisen, Natalie
Quick, Alycia
Modica, Claire M.
Hughes, John D.
Haran, Francis. J.
Goforth, Carl
Ahlers, Stephen T.
author_facet Stone, James R.
Avants, Brian B.
Tustison, Nicholas J.
Wassermann, Eric M.
Gill, Jessica
Polejaeva, Elena
Dell, Kristine C.
Carr, Walter
Yarnell, Angela M.
LoPresti, Matthew L.
Walker, Peter
O'Brien, Meghan
Domeisen, Natalie
Quick, Alycia
Modica, Claire M.
Hughes, John D.
Haran, Francis. J.
Goforth, Carl
Ahlers, Stephen T.
author_sort Stone, James R.
collection PubMed
description Combat military and civilian law enforcement personnel may be exposed to repetitive low-intensity blast events during training and operations. Persons who use explosives to gain entry (i.e., breach) into buildings are known as “breachers” or dynamic entry personnel. Breachers operate under the guidance of established safety protocols, but despite these precautions, breachers who are exposed to low-level blast throughout their careers frequently report performance deficits and symptoms to healthcare providers. Although little is known about the etiology linking blast exposure to clinical symptoms in humans, animal studies demonstrate network-level changes in brain function, alterations in brain morphology, vascular and inflammatory changes, hearing loss, and even alterations in gene expression after repeated blast exposure. To explore whether similar effects occur in humans, we collected a comprehensive data battery from 20 experienced breachers exposed to blast throughout their careers and 14 military and law enforcement controls. This battery included neuropsychological assessments, blood biomarkers, and magnetic resonance imaging measures, including cortical thickness, diffusion tensor imaging of white matter, functional connectivity, and perfusion. To better understand the relationship between repetitive low-level blast exposure and behavioral and imaging differences in humans, we analyzed the data using similarity-driven multi-view linear reconstruction (SiMLR). SiMLR is specifically designed for multiple modality statistical integration using dimensionality-reduction techniques for studies with high-dimensional, yet sparse, data (i.e., low number of subjects and many data per subject). We identify significant group effects in these data spanning brain structure, function, and blood biomarkers.
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spelling pubmed-77033992020-12-01 Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers Stone, James R. Avants, Brian B. Tustison, Nicholas J. Wassermann, Eric M. Gill, Jessica Polejaeva, Elena Dell, Kristine C. Carr, Walter Yarnell, Angela M. LoPresti, Matthew L. Walker, Peter O'Brien, Meghan Domeisen, Natalie Quick, Alycia Modica, Claire M. Hughes, John D. Haran, Francis. J. Goforth, Carl Ahlers, Stephen T. J Neurotrauma Original Articles Combat military and civilian law enforcement personnel may be exposed to repetitive low-intensity blast events during training and operations. Persons who use explosives to gain entry (i.e., breach) into buildings are known as “breachers” or dynamic entry personnel. Breachers operate under the guidance of established safety protocols, but despite these precautions, breachers who are exposed to low-level blast throughout their careers frequently report performance deficits and symptoms to healthcare providers. Although little is known about the etiology linking blast exposure to clinical symptoms in humans, animal studies demonstrate network-level changes in brain function, alterations in brain morphology, vascular and inflammatory changes, hearing loss, and even alterations in gene expression after repeated blast exposure. To explore whether similar effects occur in humans, we collected a comprehensive data battery from 20 experienced breachers exposed to blast throughout their careers and 14 military and law enforcement controls. This battery included neuropsychological assessments, blood biomarkers, and magnetic resonance imaging measures, including cortical thickness, diffusion tensor imaging of white matter, functional connectivity, and perfusion. To better understand the relationship between repetitive low-level blast exposure and behavioral and imaging differences in humans, we analyzed the data using similarity-driven multi-view linear reconstruction (SiMLR). SiMLR is specifically designed for multiple modality statistical integration using dimensionality-reduction techniques for studies with high-dimensional, yet sparse, data (i.e., low number of subjects and many data per subject). We identify significant group effects in these data spanning brain structure, function, and blood biomarkers. Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers 2020-12-01 2020-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7703399/ /pubmed/32928028 http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2020.7141 Text en © James R. Stone et al., 2020; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. This Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Stone, James R.
Avants, Brian B.
Tustison, Nicholas J.
Wassermann, Eric M.
Gill, Jessica
Polejaeva, Elena
Dell, Kristine C.
Carr, Walter
Yarnell, Angela M.
LoPresti, Matthew L.
Walker, Peter
O'Brien, Meghan
Domeisen, Natalie
Quick, Alycia
Modica, Claire M.
Hughes, John D.
Haran, Francis. J.
Goforth, Carl
Ahlers, Stephen T.
Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers
title Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers
title_full Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers
title_fullStr Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers
title_full_unstemmed Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers
title_short Functional and Structural Neuroimaging Correlates of Repetitive Low-Level Blast Exposure in Career Breachers
title_sort functional and structural neuroimaging correlates of repetitive low-level blast exposure in career breachers
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32928028
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2020.7141
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