Studies linking head trauma with increased risk and earlier age of onset for Alzheimer's disease have yielded contradictory results. Now a population-based study involving 448 healthy older adults (70+) and 141 seniors with mild cognitive impairment has found that a history of head trauma was associated with higher levels of amyloid-beta plaques (a marker for Alzheimer’s) in those with MCI, but not in the cognitively normal. Similar rates of self-reported head trauma were found in the two groups (17% and 18%, respectively).
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-12/aaon-acr122013.php
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(2014). Head trauma and in vivo measures of amyloid and neurodegeneration in a population-based study.
Neurology. 82(1), 70 - 76.