Traumatic brain injuries are commonplace during combat; two thirds of
soldiers sent to Walter Reed Army Medical Center from Iraq suffer from
such injuries. A new study of aging Vietnam veterans with head trauma
paints a grim picture of future for troops returning from Iraq with
similar wounds.



Jordan Grafman <http://neuroscience.nih.gov/Lab.asp?Org_ID=83>  , a
neuroscientist at the National Institute of  Neurological Disorders and
Stroke <http://www.ninds.nih.gov>  , led a study of Vietnam veterans who
had suffered penetrating head injuries-trauma caused in these cases by
shrapnel or bullets entering the brain. His team found that as these
veterans aged their cognitive function declined almost twice as fast as
that of their peers. High preinjury intelligence, however, did help
protect against this drop. So did education. " The more education
you have, the more your able to stave off the effects of the injury,
including even effects of later decline," Grafman says. The
researchers also identified genetic variants that seem to predict a more
pronounced deterioration.



The findings will likely apply to Iraq veterans suffering from the same
kinds of wounds, Grafman notes. These veterans should expect an
accelerated cognitive decline, and their   physicians should be careful
not to confuse it with other neurological conditions. "We know that
this is going to happen in veterans who had head injury," he
says." They need monitoring in and reassurance that this is not
dementia."




Happy Learning,
Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>









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