The impact of previous traumatic brain injury on health and functioning: a TRACK-TBI study.

The idea that multiple traumatic brain injury (TBI) can have a cumulative detrimental effect on functioning is widely accepted. Most research supporting this idea comes from athlete samples, and it is not known whether remote history of previous TBI affects functioning after subsequent TBI in community-based samples. This study investigates whether a previous history of TBI with loss of consciousness (LOC) is associated with worse health and functioning in a sample of individuals who require emergency department care for current TBI. Twenty-three percent of the 586 individuals with current TBI in the Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury study reported having sustained a previous TBI with LOC. Individuals with previous TBI were more likely to be unemployed (χ(2)=17.86; p=0.000), report a variety of chronic medical and psychiatric conditions (4.75≤χ(2)≥24.16; p<0.05), and report substance use (16.35≤χ(2)≥27.57; p<0.01) before the acute injury, compared to those with no previous TBI history. Those with a previous TBI had less-severe acute injuries, but experienced worse outcomes at 6-month follow-up. Results of a series of regression analyses controlling for demographics and acute injury severity indicated that individuals with previous TBI reported more mood symptoms, more postconcussive symptoms, lower life satisfaction, and had slower processing speed and poorer verbal learning, compared to those with no previous TBI history. These findings suggest that history of TBI with LOC may have important implications for health and psychological functioning after TBI in community-based samples.

[1]  Y. Benjamini,et al.  Controlling the false discovery rate: a practical and powerful approach to multiple testing , 1995 .

[2]  J. Corrigan,et al.  Reliability and Predictive Validity of the Ohio State University TBI Identification Method With Prisoners , 2009, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.

[3]  J. Corrigan,et al.  Initial Reliability and Validity of the Ohio State University TBI Identification Method , 2007, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.

[4]  R. Wrona Disability and return to work outcomes after traumatic brain injury: Results from the Washington State Industrial Insurance Fund , 2010, Disability and rehabilitation.

[5]  R. Larsen,et al.  The Satisfaction with Life Scale , 1985, Journal of personality assessment.

[6]  E. Finkelstein,et al.  Incidence and Economic Burden of Injuries in the United States , 2006 .

[7]  G. Teasdale,et al.  Structured interviews for the Glasgow Outcome Scale and the extended Glasgow Outcome Scale: guidelines for their use. , 1998, Journal of neurotrauma.

[8]  R. Reitan Validity of the Trail Making Test as an Indicator of Organic Brain Damage , 1958 .

[9]  J. Costich,et al.  Recurrent traumatic brain injury. , 1992, Brain injury.

[10]  E. Laws,et al.  The incidence, causes, and secular trends of head trauma in Olmsted County, Minnesota, 1935–1974 , 1980, Neurology.

[11]  Yulin Ge,et al.  Mild traumatic brain injury: longitudinal regional brain volume changes. , 2013, Radiology.

[12]  H. Belanger,et al.  Neuropsychological performance following a history of multiple self-reported concussions: A meta-analysis , 2009, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.

[13]  M. Wald,et al.  Traumatic brain injury in the United States; emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths, 2002-2006 , 2010 .

[14]  Ronald Ruff,et al.  Two Decades of Advances in Understanding of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury , 2005, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.

[15]  M. Horner,et al.  Predictors of Psychological Symptoms 1 Year After Traumatic Brain Injury: A Population‐Based, Epidemiological Study , 2008, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.

[16]  Hester F. Lingsma,et al.  Transforming research and clinical knowledge in traumatic brain injury pilot: multicenter implementation of the common data elements for traumatic brain injury. , 2013, Journal of neurotrauma.

[17]  D. Gronwall,et al.  CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF CONCUSSION , 1975, The Lancet.

[18]  J. Barth,et al.  Outcome after mild head injury. , 1998, Clinics in sports medicine.

[19]  J. Ghajar,et al.  Clinical policy: neuroimaging and decisionmaking in adult mild traumatic brain injury in the acute setting. , 2008, Annals of emergency medicine.

[20]  D. Lackland,et al.  A population-based study of repetitive traumatic brain injury among persons with traumatic brain injury , 2009, Brain injury.

[21]  K. Cicerone,et al.  Definition of mild traumatic brain injury , 1993 .

[22]  S. Kolakowsky-Hayner,et al.  Prior history of traumatic brain injury among persons in the Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems National Database. , 2013, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

[23]  T. Ashman,et al.  Psychiatric challenges in the first 6 years after traumatic brain injury: cross-sequential analyses of Axis I disorders. , 2004, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

[24]  M Sherer,et al.  Comparison of the California Verbal Learning Test and the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test in head-injured patients. , 1995, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[25]  W. Haddon,et al.  The injury severity score: a method for describing patients with multiple injuries and evaluating emergency care. , 1974, The Journal of trauma.

[26]  P. Crane,et al.  Risk for late-life re-injury, dementia and death among individuals with traumatic brain injury: a population-based study , 2012, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry.

[27]  Stephen W Marshall,et al.  Cumulative effects associated with recurrent concussion in collegiate football players: the NCAA Concussion Study. , 2003, JAMA.

[28]  B. Jennett,et al.  Assessment of coma and impaired consciousness. A practical scale. , 1974, Lancet.

[29]  L. C. Davis,et al.  Preinjury predictors of life satisfaction at 1 year after traumatic brain injury. , 2012, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

[30]  J. Giacino,et al.  Recommendations for the use of common outcome measures in traumatic brain injury research. , 2010, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

[31]  D. Wade,et al.  The Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire: a measure of symptoms commonly experienced after head injury and its reliability , 1995, Journal of Neurology.

[32]  L. Derogatis,et al.  The SCL-90-R, the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI), and the BSI-18. , 2004 .