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Journal Article

Citation

Madura SA, McDevitt JK, Tierney RT, Mansell JL, Hayes DJ, Gaughan JP, Krynetskiy E. Brain Inj. 2016; 30(7): 908-913.

Affiliation

c Temple University School of Pharmacy , Philadelphia , PA , USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/02699052.2016.1146958

PMID

27029226

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the association of the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs74174284 within SLC17A7 promoter with concussion severity or duration.

DESIGN: A between-subjects design was utilized.

METHODS: Saliva samples and concussion severity and duration data were collected from 40 athletes diagnosed with a sport-related concussion by a physician, utilizing a standardized concussion assessment protocol. DNA was extracted, estimated and genotyped.

RESULTS: An association was found between the dominant genetic model (CC vs GG + GC; p = 0.0179) and recovery, where those carrying the minor allele were 6.33-times more likely to experience prolonged recovery rates. Within the ImPACT assessment, those carrying the CC genotype (33.38 ± 10.15, p = 0.01) had worse motor speed scores upon initial assessment compared to both heterozygous (CG) and homozygous (GG) genotypes (41.59 ± 7.39).

CONCLUSIONS: This study was the first to demonstrate an association between genetic polymorphism at rs7417284 SNP in the promoter region of the SLC17A7 gene and concussion severity and duration. Based upon these findings, rs74174284 is a potential predictive genetic marker for identifying athletes who are more susceptible for altered recovery times and worse motor speed ImPACT scores after sport-related concussion.


Language: en

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