Novel Psychiatric Disorder 6 Months After Traumatic Brain Injury in Children and Adolescents.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Jeffrey E Max, Imogen Drake, Florin Vaida, John R Hesselink, Linda Ewing-Cobbs, Russell J Schachar, Sandra B Chapman, Erin D Bigler, Elisabeth A Wilde, Ann E Saunders, Tony T Yang, Olga Tymofiyeva, Harvey S Levin
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the factors predictive of novel psychiatric disorders in the interval 0-6 months following traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Methods: Children ages 5-14 years consecutively hospitalized for mild to severe TBI at five hospitals were recruited. Participants were evaluated at baseline (soon after injury) for pre-injury characteristics including psychiatric disorders, socioeconomic status (SES), psychosocial adversity, family function, family psychiatric history, and adaptive function. In addition to the psychosocial variables, injury severity and lesion location detected with acquisition of a research MRI were measured to develop a biopsychosocial predictive model for development of novel psychiatric disorders. Psychiatric outcome, including occurrence of a novel psychiatric disorder, was assessed 6 months after the injury.

Results: The recruited sample numbered 177 children, and 141 children (80%) returned for the six-month assessment. Of the 141 children, 58 (41%) developed a novel psychiatric disorder. In univariable analyses, novel psychiatric disorder was significantly associated with lower SES, higher psychosocial adversity, and lesions in frontal lobe locations, such as frontal white matter, superior frontal gyrus, inferior frontal gyrus, and orbital gyrus. Multivariable analyses found that novel psychiatric disorder was independently and significantly associated with frontal-lobe white matter, superior frontal gyrus, and orbital gyrus lesions.

Conclusion: The results demonstrate that occurrence of novel psychiatric disorders following pediatric TBI requiring hospitalization is common and has identifiable psychosocial and specific biological predictors. However, only the lesion predictors were independently related to this adverse psychiatric outcome.

儿童和青少年创伤性脑损伤后6个月的新型精神障碍。
目的:探讨创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后0-6个月内新型精神障碍的预测因素。参与者在基线(受伤后不久)评估受伤前的特征,包括精神障碍、社会经济地位(SES)、心理社会逆境、家庭功能、家族精神病史和适应功能。除了心理社会变量外,还测量了通过获取研究MRI检测到的损伤严重程度和病变位置,以开发一个新精神疾病发展的生物心理社会预测模型。在受伤6个月后评估精神病结果,包括新的精神障碍的发生。结果:招募的样本有177名儿童,141名儿童(80%)返回进行为期六个月的评估。在141名儿童中,58名(41%)患上了新型精神障碍。在单变量分析中,新型精神障碍与较低的社会经济地位、较高的心理社会逆境以及额叶部位的病变(如额白质、额上回、额下回和眶回)显著相关。多变量分析发现,新型精神障碍与额叶白质、额上回和眶回病变独立且显著相关。结论:研究结果表明,儿童TBI后需要住院治疗的新型精神疾病的发生是常见的,并且具有可识别的心理社会和特定的生物学预测因素。然而,只有病变预测因子与这种不良的精神结果独立相关。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.40%
发文量
67
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: As the official Journal of the American Neuropsychiatric Association, the premier North American organization of clinicians, scientists, and educators specializing in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and the clinical neurosciences, the Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences (JNCN) aims to publish works that advance the science of brain-behavior relationships, the care of persons and families affected by neurodevelopmental, acquired neurological, and neurodegenerative conditions, and education and training in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry. JNCN publishes peer-reviewed articles on the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral manifestations of neurological conditions, the structural and functional neuroanatomy of idiopathic psychiatric disorders, and the clinical and educational applications and public health implications of scientific advances in these areas. The Journal features systematic reviews and meta-analyses, narrative reviews, original research articles, scholarly considerations of treatment and educational challenges in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, analyses and commentaries on advances and emerging trends in the field, international perspectives on neuropsychiatry, opinions and introspections, case reports that inform on the structural and functional bases of neuropsychiatric conditions, and classic pieces from the field’s rich history.
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