青少年学生运动员脑震荡后症状的结构:验证性因子分析与测量不变性。

The Clinical neuropsychologist Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Epub Date: 2020-12-09 DOI:10.1080/13854046.2020.1850867
Justin E Karr, Grant L Iverson
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引用次数: 16

摘要

目的:本研究考察了脑震荡后症状量表(PCSS)在基线和疑似运动相关脑震荡后的因素模型,以及损伤前和损伤后评估以及年龄、性别和健康史组(如注意缺陷/多动障碍、精神病史)的测量不变性。方法:青少年学生运动员(13-18岁)完成基线PCSS (n = 39,015;54.3%男孩)和在疑似脑震荡后21天内的子样本(n = 1554;56.7%的男孩)完成了损伤后的PCSS。评估了五个模型的拟合和不变性。结果:验证性因素分析显示,基线和损伤后模型适合于先前支持的四因素模型(即认知-感觉、睡眠-唤醒、前庭-躯体和情感),另一种四因素模型(即认知、睡眠-唤醒、身体和情感),以及包含前庭-躯体和情感特定因素的不完全双因素模型,以及损伤前和损伤后评估的部分不变性。在人口统计学和健康史组的基线上建立了每个模型的部分到完全不变性。结论:结果显示了PCSS亚量表(即认知、睡眠觉醒、身体和情感)和总分在损伤前和损伤后评估以及人口统计学和健康史组基线时的经验和概念支持。未来的规范数据,按人口统计学和健康史分层,可以为脑震荡治疗提供更精确的症状评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The structure of post-concussion symptoms in adolescent student athletes: Confirmatory factor analysis and measurement invariance.

Objective: This study examined factor models for the Post-Concussion Symptom Scale (PCSS) at baseline and after suspected sport-related concussion, and measurement invariance from pre-injury to post-injury assessments and across age, gender, and health history groups (e.g., attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, psychiatric history). Methods: Adolescent student athletes (ages 13-18) completed a baseline PCSS (n = 39,015; 54.3% boys) and a subsample within 21 days of a suspected concussion (n = 1,554; 56.7% boys) completed a post-injury PCSS. Five models were evaluated for fit and invariance. Results: Confirmatory factor analyses showed good baseline and post-injury model fit for a previously supported four-factor model (i.e., cognitive-sensory, sleep-arousal, vestibular-somatic, and affective), an alternative four-factor model (i.e., cognitive, sleep-arousal, physical, and affective), and an incomplete bifactor model with vestibular-somatic and affective specific factors, along with partial invariance from pre-injury to post-injury assessments. Partial-to-full invariance was established for each model at baseline across demographic and health history groups. Conclusions: Results showed empirical and conceptual support for both PCSS subscales (i.e., cognitive, sleep-arousal, physical, and affective) and a total score for use in pre-injury to post-injury assessments and across demographic and health history groups at baseline. Future normative data, stratified by demographics and health history, could provide more precise symptom assessments for concussion management.

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