创伤性脑损伤
萧条(经济学)
焦虑
医学
物理疗法
伤害预防
毒物控制
精神科
急诊医学
宏观经济学
经济
作者
Karen A. Martinez,Ehri Ryu,Christopher J. Patrick,Nancy R. Temkin,Murray B. Stein,Brooke E. Magnus,Michael McCrea,Geoffrey T. Manley,Lindsay D. Nelson,the TRACK-TBI Investigators
标识
DOI:10.1017/s0033291724001211
摘要
BACKGROUND: Neuropsychiatric symptoms are common after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and often resolve within 3 months post-injury. However, the degree to which individual patients follow this course is unknown. We characterized trajectories of neuropsychiatric symptoms over 12 months post-TBI. We hypothesized that a substantial proportion of individuals would display trajectories distinct from the group-average course, with some exhibiting less favorable courses. METHODS: = 300). Trajectories of six symptom dimensions (Depression, Anxiety, Fear, Sleep, Physical, and Pain) were identified using growth mixture modeling from 2 weeks to 12 months post-injury. RESULTS: Depression, Anxiety, Fear, and Physical symptoms displayed three trajectories: Stable-Low (86.2-88.6%), Worsening (5.6-10.9%), and Improving (2.6-6.4%). Among symptomatic trajectories (Worsening, Improving), lower-severity TBI was associated with higher prevalence of elevated symptoms at 2 weeks that steadily resolved over 12 months compared to all other groups, whereas higher-severity TBI was associated with higher prevalence of symptoms that gradually worsened from 3-12 months. Sleep and Pain displayed more variable recovery courses, and the most common trajectory entailed an average level of problems that remained stable over time (Stable-Average; 46.7-82.6%). Symptomatic Sleep and Pain trajectories (Stable-Average, Improving) were more common in traumatically injured groups. CONCLUSIONS: atypical recovery in the first 12 months post-injury.
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