The prospective course of postconcussion syndrome: the role of mild traumatic brain injury.
@article{Meares2011ThePC,
title={The prospective course of postconcussion syndrome: the role of mild traumatic brain injury.},
author={Susanne Meares and E. A. Shores and Alan J Taylor and Jennifer Batchelor and Richard A. Bryant and Ian J. Baguley and Jennifer Chapman and Joseph A. Gurka and Jeno E. Marosszeky},
journal={Neuropsychology},
year={2011},
volume={25 4},
pages={
454-65
}
}OBJECTIVE
To investigate whether postconcussion syndrome (PCS) represents long-term sequelae associated with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).
METHODS
Prospective consecutive admissions to a Level 1 trauma hospital were assessed a mean 4.9 days and again 106.2 days post-injury. The final sample comprised 62 mTBI and 58 nonbrain injured trauma controls (TC). Change or lack of change in individual PCS-like symptoms and PCS was examined. Multilevel logistic regression was used to analyze…
244 Citations
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- 2014
There was a very clear, strong, and clinically meaningful association between depression, posttraumatic stress, and postconcussion symptoms in this sample, and brain injury severity was not associated with symptom reporting following TBI.
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This study directly showed the characteristics of long-term PCS and associating factors and evidenced that specific physical, cognitive, and emotional symptoms might be determinant to identify the subgroups of patients with long- term PCS endorsement.
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Longitudinal studies applying standardized assessment strategies, diagnoses, and evidence-based interventions are required in adult and pediatric mTBI populations to optimize recovery and reduce the substantial socio-economic burden of post-concussion symptoms.
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