@article {10565, title = {Physical and Functional Impairment Among Older Adults With a History of Traumatic Brain Injury.}, journal = {Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation}, volume = {35}, year = {2020}, abstract = {

OBJECTIVES: To examine the association of lifetime history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) with later-life physical impairment (PI) and functional impairment (FI) and to evaluate the impact of neurobehavioral symptoms that frequently co-occur with TBI on these relations.

PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1148 respondents to the 2014 Wave of the Health and Retirement Study, a nationally representative survey of older community-dwelling adults, randomly selected to participate in a TBI exposure survey. They reported no prior TBI (n = 737) or prior TBI (n = 411).

DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey study.

MAIN MEASURES: Physical impairment (self-reported difficulty with >=1 of 8 physical activities); FI (self-reported difficulty with >=1 of 11 activities of daily living); self-reported current neurobehavioral symptoms (pain, sleep problems, depression, subjective memory impairment); The Ohio State University TBI Identification Method (OSU-TBI-ID)-short form.

ANALYSES: Stepwise logistic regression models ([1] unadjusted; [2] adjusted for demographics and medical comorbidities; [3] additionally adjusted for neurobehavioral symptoms) compared PI and FI between TBI groups.

RESULTS: Traumatic brain injury-exposed (mean: 33.6 years postinjury) respondents were younger, less likely to be female, and reported more comorbidities and neurobehavioral symptoms. Although TBI was significantly associated with increased odds of PI and FI in unadjusted models and models adjusted for demographics/comorbidities (adjusted odds ratio, 95\% confidence interval: PI 1.62, 1.21-2.17; FI 1.60, 1.20-2.14), this association was no longer statistically significant after further adjustment for neurobehavioral symptoms.

CONCLUSION: History of TBI is associated with substantial PI and FI among community-dwelling older adults. Further research is warranted to determine whether aggressive management of neurobehavioral symptoms in this population may mitigate long-term PI and FI in this population.

}, keywords = {Brain injury, functional impairment, physical impairment}, issn = {1550-509X}, doi = {10.1097/HTR.0000000000000552}, author = {Erica S Kornblith and Kenneth M. Langa and Kristine Yaffe and Raquel C Gardner} } @article {10971, title = {Prevalence of Lifetime History of Traumatic Brain Injury among Older Male Veterans Compared to Civilians: A Nationally Representative Study}, journal = {Journal of NeurotraumaJournal of Neurotrauma}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common among older adults as well as among Veterans in the United States and can increase risk for dementia. We compared prevalence of TBI in older male Veterans and civilians using a nationally representative sample. We examined data from 599 male respondents to the 2014 Wave of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative survey of older adults, randomly selected to participate in a comprehensive TBI survey. Respondents self-reported no injury, non-TBI head/neck injury (NTI), or TBI. We used weighted analyses to examine prevalence of injury and relative risk of injury sub-types. Among male Veterans, we found a national prevalence of over 70\% for lifetime history of any head/neck injury (TBI plus NTI), 14.3\% for multiple NTI, and 36\% for lifetime history of at least one TBI. In contrast, prevalence estimates for male civilians were 58\% for lifetime history of head/neck injury, 4.8\% for multiple NTI, and 45\% for lifetime history of at least one TBI (all comparisons p<0.001). Male civilians have higher self-reported TBI prevalence, while male Veterans have higher self-reported NTI and multiple-NTI prevalence. Further research on drivers of the unexpectedly higher prevalence of lifetime history of TBI in male civilians, as well as on mechanisms and sequelae of the highly prevalent non-TBI head/neck injuries among older male Veterans, is warranted.Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common among older adults as well as among Veterans in the United States and can increase risk for dementia. We compared prevalence of TBI in older male Veterans and civilians using a nationally representative sample. We examined data from 599 male respondents to the 2014 Wave of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative survey of older adults, randomly selected to participate in a comprehensive TBI survey. Respondents self-reported no injury, non-TBI head/neck injury (NTI), or TBI. We used weighted analyses to examine prevalence of injury and relative risk of injury sub-types. Among male Veterans, we found a national prevalence of over 70\% for lifetime history of any head/neck injury (TBI plus NTI), 14.3\% for multiple NTI, and 36\% for lifetime history of at least one TBI. In contrast, prevalence estimates for male civilians were 58\% for lifetime history of head/neck injury, 4.8\% for multiple NTI, and 45\% for lifetime history of at least one TBI (all comparisons p<0.001). Male civilians have higher self-reported TBI prevalence, while male Veterans have higher self-reported NTI and multiple-NTI prevalence. Further research on drivers of the unexpectedly higher prevalence of lifetime history of TBI in male civilians, as well as on mechanisms and sequelae of the highly prevalent non-TBI head/neck injuries among older male Veterans, is warranted.}, keywords = {Brain Injuries, Dementia, Traumatic}, isbn = {0897-7151}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.2020.7062}, author = {Erica S Kornblith and Kristine Yaffe and Kenneth M. Langa and Raquel C Gardner} }