4.0 Article

Atypical symptom reporting after mild traumatic brain injury

Journal

BRAIN IMPAIRMENT
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 114-123

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/BrImp.2021.30

Keywords

Symptoms; predictors; mild traumatic brain injury; concussion; outcome

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This study aimed to determine the percentage of people reporting atypical symptoms 1 month after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and explore their links to recovery 12 months later. The results showed that atypical symptoms were not significant predictors of self-rated recovery at 12 months, while older age at injury and higher typical symptoms at 1 month were independently associated with poorer recovery at 12 months.
Objective:Early reporting of atypical symptoms following a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) may be an early indicator of poor prognosis. This study aimed to determine the percentage of people reporting atypical symptoms 1-month post-mTBI and explore links to recovery 12 months later in a community-dwelling mTBI sample. Methods:Adult participants (>16 years) who had experienced a mTBI were identified from a longitudinal incidence study (BIONIC). At 1-month post-injury, 260 participants completed the Rivermead Post-Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire (typical symptoms) plus four atypical symptom items (hemiplegia, difficulty swallowing, digestion problems and difficulties with fine motor tasks). At 12 months post-injury, 73.9% (n = 193) rated their overall recovery on a 100-point scale. An ordinal regression explored the association between atypical symptoms at 1 month and recovery at 12 months post-injury (low = 0-80, moderate = 81-99 and complete recovery = 100), whilst controlling for age, sex, rehabilitation received, ethnicity, mental and physical comorbidities and additional injuries sustained at the time of injury. Results:At 1-month post-injury <1% of participants reported hemiplegia, 5.4% difficulty swallowing, 10% digestion problems and 15.4% difficulties with fine motor tasks. The ordinal regression model revealed atypical symptoms were not significant predictors of self-rated recovery at 12 months. Older age at injury and higher typical symptoms at 1 month were independently associated with poorer recovery at 12 months, p < 0.01. Conclusion:Atypical symptoms on initial presentation were not linked to global self-reported recovery at 12 months. Age at injury and typical symptoms are stronger early indicators of longer-term prognosis. Further research is needed to determine if atypical symptoms predict other outcomes following mTBI.

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