4.1 Article

Cognition and post-concussive symptom status after pediatric mild traumatic brain injury

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CHILD NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09297049.2023.2181946

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Neuropsychological testing; adolescent; recovery; head injury

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Cognitive impairment and post-concussive symptoms are common sequelae of pediatric mild traumatic brain injury. This study compared the cognitive outcomes of asymptomatic and symptomatic pmTBI patients with healthy controls during the sub-acute and early chronic phases. The results showed that symptomatic patients performed worse than healthy controls in processing speed, attention, and verbal memory during the sub-acute phase, while both groups showed lower performance in verbal memory during the early chronic phase. The findings suggest that cognitive recovery may be a separate process from the resolution of subjective symptomology.
Cognitive impairment and post-concussive symptoms (PCS) represent hallmark sequelae of pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI). Few studies have directly compared cognition as a function of PCS status longitudinally. Cognitive outcomes were therefore compared for asymptomatic pmTBI, symptomatic pmTBI, and healthy controls (HC) during sub-acute (SA; 1-11 days) and early chronic (EC; approximately 4 months) post-injury phases. We predicted worse cognitive performance for both pmTBI groups relative to HC at the SA visit. At the EC visit, we predicted continued impairment from the symptomatic group, but no difference between asymptomatic pmTBI and HCs. A battery of clinical (semi-structured interviews and self-report questionnaires) and neuropsychological measures were administered to 203 pmTBI and 139 HC participants, with greater than 80% retention at the EC visit. A standardized change method classified pmTBI into binary categories of asymptomatic or symptomatic based on PCS scores. Symptomatic pmTBI performed significantly worse than HCs on processing speed, attention, and verbal memory at SA visit, whereas lower performance was only present for verbal memory for asymptomatic pmTBI. Lower performance in verbal memory persisted for both pmTBI groups at the EC visit. Surprisingly, a minority (16%) of pmTBI switched from asymptomatic to symptomatic status at the EC visit. Current findings suggest that PCS and cognition are more closely coupled during the first week of injury but become decoupled several months post-injury. Evidence of lower performance in verbal memory for both asymptomatic and symptomatic pmTBI suggests that cognitive recovery may be a process separate from the resolution of subjective symptomology.

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