Literature DB >> 18586138

Spinal cord injury and co-occurring traumatic brain injury: assessment and incidence.

Stephen Macciocchi1, Ronald T Seel, Nicole Thompson, Rashida Byams, Brock Bowman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine prospectively the incidence and severity of co-occurring traumatic brain injury (TBI) in persons with traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) and to describe a TBI assessment process for SCI rehabilitation professionals.
DESIGN: A prospective, cohort design to collect and analyze clinical variables relevant for diagnosing co-occurring TBI.
SETTING: An urban, single-center National Institute of Disability and Rehabilitation Research Model Spinal Cord Injury System in the Southeastern United States. PARTICIPANTS: People (N=198) who met inclusion criteria and provided consent within an 18-month recruitment window.
INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: FIM cognitive scale.
RESULTS: Based on participants' presence and duration of posttraumatic amnesia, initial Glasgow Coma Scale total score, and presence of cerebral lesion documented by neuroimaging, 60% of our traumatic SCI sample also sustained a TBI (n=118). Most co-occurring TBIs were mild (34%). Co-occurring mild complicated (10%), moderate (6%), and severe TBI (10%) were less common but still occurred in a significant percentage (26%) of persons with traumatic SCI. Persons with traumatic SCI who were injured in motor vehicle collisions and falls were more likely to sustain a co-occurring TBI. Cervical level traumatic SCI was associated with greater rates of TBI but not more severe injuries. Tree analyses established a practical algorithm for classifying TBI severity associated with traumatic SCI. Analysis of variance established criterion validity for the algorithm's TBI severity classifications.
CONCLUSIONS: Findings from our prospective study provide strong support that TBI is a common co-occurring injury with traumatic SCI. Incomplete acute care medical record documentation of TBI in the traumatic SCI population remains a considerable issue, and there is a significant need to educate emergency department and acute care personnel on the TBI clinical data needs of acute rehabilitation providers. A systematic algorithm for reviewing acute care medical records can yield valid estimates of TBI severity in the traumatic SCI population.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18586138     DOI: 10.1016/j.apmr.2007.11.055

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Phys Med Rehabil        ISSN: 0003-9993            Impact factor:   3.966


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5.  Competent care for persons with spinal cord injury and dysfunction in acute inpatient rehabilitation.

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6.  The SCIRehab project: treatment time spent in SCI rehabilitation. Speech-language pathology treatment time during inpatient spinal cord injury rehabilitation: the SCIRehab project.

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7.  Effects of concomitant spinal cord injury and brain injury on medical and functional outcomes and community participation.

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8.  A randomized controlled trial of venlafaxine XR for major depressive disorder after spinal cord injury: Methods and lessons learned.

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9.  Relationship of speech-language pathology inpatient rehabilitation interventions and patient characteristics to outcomes following spinal cord injury: the SCIRehab project.

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10.  Relationship of patient characteristics and rehabilitation services to outcomes following spinal cord injury: the SCIRehab project.

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