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Long-Term Effects of Concussive TBI

Regardless of its intensity, researchers find traumatic brain injury has worsening effects and comorbidities years after diagnosis.


 

What are the long-term clinical effects of wartime traumatic brain injuries (TBIs)? Most are mild, but in general all are incompletely described, say researchers from University of Washington in Seattle and Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. However, their own study found that service members with even mild concussive TBI often “experienced evolution, not resolution” of symptoms.

The researchers compared the results of 1-year and 5-year clinical evaluations of 50 active-duty U.S. military with acute to subacute concussive blast injury and 44 deployed but uninjured service members. The evaluations included neurobehavioral and neuropsychological performance and mental health burden.

At 5 years, global disability, satisfaction with life, neurobehavioral symptom severity, psychiatric symptom severity, and sleep impairment were significantly worse in patients with concussive blast TBI. Of the patients with concussive blast TBI, 36 (72%) showed decline, compared with only 5 of the combat-deployed group (11%). The researchers also found symptoms of PTSD and depression worsened in the concussive TBI patients. Performance on cognitive measures was no different between the 2 groups. A combination of factors, including neurobehavioral symptom severity, walking ability, and verbal fluency at 1 year after injury, was highly predictive of poor outcomes 5 years later.

“This is one of the first studies to connect the dots from injury to longer term outcomes and it shows that even mild concussions can lead to long-term impairment and continued decline in satisfaction with life,” said lead author Christine L. Mac Donald, PhD. “Most physicians believe that patients will stabilize 6 to 12 months postinjury, but this study challenges that.”

The researchers also found that, although 80% of service members with concussions had sought mental health treatment, only 19% reported that those programs were helpful. The findings advocate for new treatment strategies, the researchers say, to “combat the long-term and extremely costly effect” of these wartime injuries.

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