Genetic Variation and Impact on Outcome in Traumatic Brain Injury: an Overview of Recent Discoveries.
Alwyn GomezCarleen BatsonLogan FroeseFrederick Adam ZeilerPublished in: Current neurology and neuroscience reports (2021)
In recent years, SNP association studies in TBI have focused on global, neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric, and physiologic outcomes. While the APOE gene has been the most extensively studied, other genes associated with neural repair, cell death, the blood-brain barrier, cerebral edema, neurotransmitters, mitochondria, and inflammatory cytokines have all been examined for their association with various outcomes following TBI. The results have been mixed across studies and even within genes. SNP association studies provide insight into mechanisms by which outcomes may vary following TBI. Their individual clinical utility, however, is often limited by small sample sizes and poor reproducibility. In the future, they may serve as hypothesis generating for future therapeutic targets.
Keyphrases
- traumatic brain injury
- genome wide
- cell death
- case control
- severe traumatic brain injury
- dna methylation
- current status
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- mild traumatic brain injury
- genome wide identification
- cognitive decline
- signaling pathway
- bipolar disorder
- brain injury
- high fat diet
- copy number
- adipose tissue
- transcription factor
- blood brain barrier
- genetic diversity
- cell cycle arrest
- solid state