| Literature DB >> 25010719 |
Ashley Di Battista1, Celia Godfrey2, Cheryl Soo2, Cathy Catroppa3, Vicki Anderson4.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Traumatic brain injury is (TBI) a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in youth. Adult survivors of a severe pediatric TBI are vulnerable to global impairments, including greater employment difficulties, poor quality of life (HRQoL) and increased risk of mental health problems. When estimating the health related quality of life in adolescents, the presence of anxiety and depression and the quality of social relationships are important considerations, because adolescents are entrenched in social development during this phase of maturation. The influence of anxiety, depression and loneliness on health related quality of life in adolescent survivors of TBI has not been documented. This pilot study aimed to identify and measure the relationship between anxiety, depression and loneliness and perceived health related quality of life in adolescent survivors of a TBI.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25010719 PMCID: PMC4092017 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Participant Recruitment and Final Sample Flow Diagram.
This figure documents the participant recruitment process, sources, participation and decline rates, accounting for the final sample.
Anxiety, Depression and HRQoL Ratings Stratified by Self-Report and Parental Proxy Report.
| Sample | Anxiety Clinically Relevant n, (%) | Depression Clinically Relevant n, (%) | Good Overall HRQoL n, (%) | Poor Overall HRQoL n, (%) | Peer Network Loneliness – Lonely n, (%) | Peer Dyadic Loneliness – Lonely n, (%) | Differential Loneliness – Lonely n, (%) |
|
| 3, (27.2%) | 2, (18.2%) | 7, (67%) | 4, (36.4%) | 1, (9.1%) | 4, (36.4%) | 0, (0%) |
|
| 1, (11.1%) | 1, (11.1%) | 7 (78.8%) | 2, (22.2%) | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Participant Demographics and Injury Characteristics.
| GENDER | AGE INJURY, | TIME SINCEINJURY | CAUSE OF INJURY | TYPE OF INJURY | GCS Scene; | PTA(days,hours) | LOC | SURGICALINTERVENTION(YES, NO) | CT (Abnormal,Normal) | NEUROLOGICALSIGNS(present, absent) | TBISEVERITY |
| M | 16 y, | 1 yr 11 mo | MVA ( | Acceleration/deceleration | NA; GCS = | 21 DAYS | NA | NO | ABNORMAL | PRESENT | MSD |
| F | 11 y 9 m, | 2 yrs 2 mo | Sports-related headcollision withstationary object | Direct Impact, headagainst object.Skull fracture. | NA; | 24 HOURS | <1 MIN | YES | ABNORMAL | PRESENT | MSD |
| M | 14 y, 10 m | 2 yrs 3 mo | Sports-related headcollision with ground | Direct impact, headagainst object | NA; | NA | <1 MIN | NO | NORMAL | PRESENT | MP |
| M | 13 y, 3 m | 2 yrs 2 mo | Sports-related headcollision with ground | Direct impact, headagainst object | NA; | NA | SHORTDURATION | NO | NORMAL | PRESENT | MP |
| M | 12 yrs,10 mo | 4 yrs 2 mo | MVA ( | Acceleration/deceleration | NA; | NA | NA | YES | ABNORMAL | PRESENT | MSD |
| *F | 15 yrs, 0 mo | 3 yrs 5 mo | Violence/assault | Direct impact, blowto the head | NA; | NA | NA | NO | NORMAL | PRESENT | SP |
| M | 12 yrs, 3 mo | 6 yrs 11 mo | Violence/assault | Direct impact, headagainst object | NA; | NA | NA | NO | NORMAL | PRESENT | SP |
| M | 4 yrs, 4 mo | 10 yrs 9 mo | MVA ( | Acceleration/deceleration | NA; | NA | NA | YES | ABNORMAL | PRESENT | MSD |
| F | 11 yrs, 3 mo | 7 yrs, 3 mo | MVA ( | Acceleration/deceleration | NA; | NA | SHORTDURATION | NO | ABNORMAL | PRESENT | MSD |
| F | 12 yrs, 9 mo | 6 yrs, 7 mo | MVA ( | Direct impact, headagainst object | NA; | NA | NA | NO | ABNORMAL | PRESENT | MSD |
| M | 13 yrs, 0 mo | 3 yrs, 0 mo | Sports-related headcollision with ground | Direct impact, headagainst object | NA; | NA | SHORTDURATION | NO | NORMAL | PRESENT | MP |
NA = information was not documented in medical file; Short Duration = written as “short duration” in the medical file, no time/quantifiable duration recorded; TBI severity reported according to Mayo Classification System [29]; SP = symptomatic possible TBI; MP = mild probable TBI; MSD = Moderate-severe definite TBI. *Previous skull fracture as infant (<1 year of age).
Figure 2Regression Model, Self-Reported Depression and HRQoL.
Cumulative distribution functions (fit between probability distributions) of self-reported depression against self-reported HRQoL. The Probability-Probability (P-P) plot demarks the fit of probability distributions, The data presented are approximately linear, which suggests that the specified theoretical distribution was the correct model (e.g. a good fit between the specific distribution and the observed data).