| Literature DB >> 26031289 |
Kristin R Archer1,2, Rogelio A Coronado3, Lori R Haislip4, Christine M Abraham5, Susan W Vanston6, Anthony E Lazaro7, James C Jackson8,9,10, E Wesley Ely11,12, Oscar D Guillamondegui13, William T Obremskey14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Approximately 1 million individuals experience a mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) and cost the United States nearly $17 billion each year. Many trauma survivors with mild TBI have debilitating and long-term physical, emotional, and cognitive impairments that are unrecognized at trauma centers. Early intervention studies are needed to address these impairments, especially cognitive deficits in executive functioning. Goal management training (GMT) is a structured cognitive rehabilitation program that has been found to improve executive functioning in patients with moderate to severe TBI. The current study adapted the GMT program for telephone delivery in order to improve the accessibility of rehabilitation services in a patient population with multiple barriers to care and significant yet unrecognized cognitive impairment. The primary objective of this study is to examine the efficacy of telephone-based GMT for improving executive functioning, functional status, and psychological health in trauma survivors with mild TBI. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26031289 PMCID: PMC4454274 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-0775-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Study flow diagram
Data collection schedule after hospital discharge
| 6 weeks | 4 months | 7 months | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient characteristics | |||
| Age, gender | x | ||
| Race/ethnicity | x | ||
| Marital status | x | ||
| Educational level | x | ||
| Insurance status | x | ||
| Height/weight | x | ||
| Smoking status | x | ||
| Working status | x | ||
| Comorbid conditions | x | ||
| Recovery expectations | x | ||
| Clinical characteristics | |||
| Glasgow Coma Scale | x | ||
| Injury Severity Score | x | ||
| Mechanism of injury | x | ||
| Type of injury | x | ||
| Surgical procedure | x | ||
| Length of hospital stay | x | ||
| Intensive care unit stay | x | ||
| Ventilator days | x | x | x |
| Medications | x | x | x |
| Complications | x | x | x |
| Executive functioning | |||
| D-KEFS Tower Test | x | x | x |
| Trails B | x | x | x |
| FAS test | x | x | x |
| SART | x | x | x |
| Hotel Task | x | x | x |
| Dysexecutive Questionnaire | x | X | x |
| Cognitive Failures Questionnaire | x | x | X |
| Functional status | |||
| Functional Activities Questionnaire | x | x | x |
| Quality of Life After Brain Injury | x | x | x |
| Psychological | |||
| Patient Health Questionnaire-9 | x | x | x |
| PTSD Checklist - Civilian Version | x | x | x |
D-KEFS Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System, SART Sustained Attention to Response Test, PTSD posttraumatic stress disorder
Summary of goal management training intervention by session
| Session 1: Slip-ups | Overall introduction, define goals and absentminded slips, raise awareness of consequences of slips, introduce present-mindedness and mindful practice in daily life |
| Session 2: Stop the automatic pilot | Define automatic pilot and how it leads to errors, learn how to ‘STOP’ automatic pilot, practice present-mindedness |
| Session 3: The mental blackboard | Define the mental blackboard, learn how to ‘STOP’ and check mental blackboard, staying in the present through breathing |
| Session 4: State your goals | Define goals, learn how to state goals, practice ‘STOP’ and ‘STATE’ and breath focus to become present-minded |
| Session 5: Making decisions | Define competing goals, learn how to understand emotional reaction to indecision, practice ‘STOP-STATE’ to reduce stress and indecision |
| Session 6: Splitting tasks into subtasks | Define overwhelming goals, learn how to split goals, practice ‘STOP-STATE-SPLIT’ |
| Session 7: Checking (STOP) | Learn how to recognize errors in ‘STOP-STATE-SPLIT’ cycle, review how to use ‘STOP’ to monitor daily tasks, review strategies for being present-minded, wrap-up |
Figure 2Goal management training overview
Summary of education intervention by session
| Session 1: Introduction | Overall introduction, explain the goals of the program, define basic brain anatomy and consequences of trauma |
| Session 2: Brain activity | Explain importance of keeping brain active, define the assessment of brain activity |
| Session 3: Memory I | Explain the importance of memory, define the types of memory and memory processes |
| Session 4: Memory II | Review memory and the brain, learn how memory breaks down, define functional implications of memory loss |
| Session 5: Attention and executive function | Define attention and executive functioning, learn how attention and executive functioning breaks down |
| Session 6: Lifestyle I | Explain importance of stress, sleep, and exercise on brain function, define the influence of lifestyle on recovery |
| Session 7: Lifestyle II | Explain importance of nutrition, energy management, and communication on brain function, review healthy lifestyle for recovery, wrap-up |
Cognitive tests and patient-reported questionnaires for assessing executive functioning
| Test | Description | Executive function | Outcome | Scoring | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DKEFs Tower Test [ | A timed test that involves constructing towers of discs on a set of pegs with rules for movement and setup | Planning, sustained attention | Total number of moves | Age-adjusted scaled score [range: 1 to 19] | Higher scaled scores indicate better performance |
| Scaled scores ≤7 indicate significant impairment | |||||
| Trails B [ | A timed test that involves drawing a line between a series of alternating numbers and letters | Attentional control, cognitive flexibility, set shifting | Total time | Age, education, and sex-adjusted T-score | Higher T-scores indicate better performance |
| T-scores ≤35 indicate significant impairment | |||||
| FAS [ | A timed test that involves generating as many words beginning with the letters F, A, and S | Verbal fluency | Total number of words | Age, education, and sex-adjusted T-score | Higher T-scores indicate better performance |
| T-scores ≤35 indicate significant impairment | |||||
| SART [ | A timed computer test that involves a go/no-go task using single-digit numbers | Sustained attention and inhibition | Errors of commission and omission, reaction time | Sum of errors Reaction time | Higher number of errors and slower reaction time indicate poorer performance |
| Hotel Task [ | A timed test that involves a real-life multitasking situation with different task components | Planning, organization | Total time, time spent on each task, number of tasks attempted | Deviation time from optimal time allocation | Greater deviation time indicates poorer performance |
| DEX [ | A 20-item questionnaire that measures behavioral change and difficulties with executive functions | Changes in emotion, personality, motivation, behavior, and cognition | Total score | Summed score [range: 0 to 80] | Higher scores indicate greater cognitive impairment |
| CFQ [ | A 25-item questionnaire that measures daily mental errors related to attention and cognition | General everyday life cognitive failures | Total score | Summed score [range: 0 to 100] | Higher scores indicate greater cognitive impairment Scores >38 indicate cognitive difficulties |
D-KEFS Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System, SART Sustained Attention to Response Test, DEX Dysexecutive Questionnaire, CFQ Cognitive Failures Questionnaire