Pilots who fly at altitudes above 18,000 feet are typically exposed to a type of illness called "decompression sickness" that results from quick changes in environmental pressure, researchers said.
For the study, 102 U-2 US Air Force pilots and 91 non-pilots between the ages of 26 and 50 underwent MRI brain scans.
The scans measured the amount of white matter hyper-intensities, or tiny brain lesions associated with memory decline in other neurological diseases. The groups were matched for age, education and health factors.
"The risk for decompression sickness among Air Force pilots has tripled from 2006, probably due to more frequent and longer periods of exposure for pilots. To date however, we have been unable to demonstrate any permanent clinical neurocognitive or memory decline," said McGuire.
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Symptoms affecting the brain that sometimes accompany decompression sickness include slowed thought processes, confusion, unresponsiveness and permanent memory loss.
The research also found that while the lesions in non-pilots were mainly found in the frontal white matter, as occurs in normal ageing, lesions in the pilots were evenly distributed throughout the brain.
"These results may be valuable in assessing risk for occupations that include high-altitude mountain climbing, deep sea diving and high-altitude flying," McGuire said.
The study was published in the journal Neurology.