Brain scientists in Washington state are asking the families of armed services members to consider one last contribution.
Researchers at the University of Washington and the local Veterans Affairs health care system have begun collecting the donated brains of service members to examine for possible dementia and other disorders linked to repeated blast injury and head trauma.
The program, the Pacific Northwest Brain Donor Network, is aimed at understanding the impact of mild traumatic brain injury on active-duty military members and veterans.
โWe are going to study these brains to the full extent that we are capable,โ said C. Dirk Keene, who leads the neuropathology core at UW Medicine. โThey are so rare, so valuable and just so precious, and can give us so much information about what these exposures mean.โ
Keene and his colleagues, including Elaine Peskind, who co-directs the Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Centers at the Puget Sound Veterans Administration hospital, will look for signs that service members with mTBI also may have developed disorders including Alzheimerโs disease or chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
CTE has received wide attention recently after a large number of former American football players were diagnosed with the neurological disorder. Like football players, troops who suffer repeated concussions or other head trauma may develop the debilitating condition, which is diagnosed only after death.
But, so far, little research has confirmed any military connection.
โWhatโs been published previously is on the brains of five Iraq veterans,โ Peskind said. โAnother paper will be published soon with another five veterans. Thereโs just nothing out there.โ
Since the program started in March, researchers have acquired three brains. They include donations from one military veteran, a middle-aged man who was not exposed to blast injury, and a military contractor, a woman, also middle-aged, who worked in a war zone.
The donations also include the brain of Cody Duran, 30, of Lakewood, Wash., who died April 5 from an unknown cause, said his mother, Victoria Padron.
โI donated everything,โ she said. โWhatever they could use, they could have.โ
Padronโs son wasnโt a veteran, but his young brain will serve as a control, an example of normal tissue against which scientists will measure changes.
For every brain from a veteran that researchers acquire, theyโll also need the brain of someone who didnโt serve, Keene said. Researchers expect to receive one brain a month for the study.
Information from the study will be open to other researchers, Keene said.
The pilot study was paid for in part by a $30,000 grant from the federal Alzheimerโs Disease Research Centers obtained by Desiree Marshall, an assistant medical examiner at the King County Medical Examinerโs Office who has also been working with Peskind.
Combining the study of military injuries with dementias and other disorders makes sense, Marshall said. It will be interesting to see whether the brains of veterans have signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, including a newly defined marker, a particular brain lesion caused by abnormal accumulations of proteins called tau. Tau proteins are considered a prime cause of Alzheimerโs disease.
The goal now is to increase the number of brains collected and to find more funding, either through philanthropy or grants, the researchers said.
โItโs so limited, the amount of information we have now,โ Marshall said. โEach brain, each case, is going to be so important.โ
