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J Int Neuropsychol Soc · Aug 2021
Severity of Ongoing Post-Concussive Symptoms as a Predictor of Cognitive Performance Following a Pediatric Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.
- Veronik Sicard, Danielle C Hergert, Sharvani Pabbathi Reddy, Cidney R Robertson-Benta, Andrew B Dodd, Nicholas A Shaff, David D Stephenson, Keith Owen Yeates, Jason A Cromer, Richard A Campbell, John P Phillips, Robert E Sapien, and Andrew R Mayer.
- The Mind Research Network/Lovelace Biomedical Research Institute, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
- J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2021 Aug 1; 27 (7): 686-696.
ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine the predictors of cognitive performance in patients with pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI) and to determine whether group differences in cognitive performance on a computerized test battery could be observed between pmTBI patients and healthy controls (HC) in the sub-acute (SA) and the early chronic (EC) phases of injury.Method203 pmTBI patients recruited from emergency settings and 159 age- and sex-matched HC aged 8-18 rated their ongoing post-concussive symptoms (PCS) on the Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory and completed the Cogstate brief battery in the SA (1-11 days) phase of injury. A subset (156 pmTBI patients; 144 HC) completed testing in the EC (~4 months) phase.ResultsWithin the SA phase, a group difference was only observed for the visual learning task (One-Card Learning), with pmTBI patients being less accurate relative to HC. Follow-up analyses indicated higher ongoing PCS and higher 5P clinical risk scores were significant predictors of lower One-Card Learning accuracy within SA phase, while premorbid variables (estimates of intellectual functioning, parental education, and presence of learning disabilities or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) were not.ConclusionsThe absence of group differences at EC phase is supportive of cognitive recovery by 4 months post-injury. While the severity of ongoing PCS and the 5P score were better overall predictors of cognitive performance on the Cogstate at SA relative to premorbid variables, the full regression model explained only 4.1% of the variance, highlighting the need for future work on predictors of cognitive outcomes.
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