Journal of neurotrauma
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Journal of neurotrauma · Oct 2024
ReviewSocial Determinants of Health and Health Equity in the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Sport-Related Concussion: A Content Analysis of Intervention Research and Call-To-Action.
This review was designed to (1) determine the extent to which the clinical science on sport-related concussion treatment and rehabilitation has considered social determinants of health (SDoH) or health equity and (2) offer recommendations to enhance the incorporation of SDoH and health equity in concussion treatment research and clinical care. The Concussion in Sport Group consensus statement (2023) was informed by two systematic reviews examining prescribed rest or exercise following concussion and targeted interventions to facilitate concussion recovery. We examined 31 studies, including 2,698 participants, from those two reviews. ⋯ Many studies (61.3%) excluded participants based on demographic, sociocultural, or health factors, primarily due to language proficiency. The new consensus statement includes recommendations for concussion treatment and rehabilitation that rely on an evidence base that has not included SDoH or studies addressing health equity. Researchers are encouraged to design treatment and rehabilitation studies that focus specifically on underrepresented groups to determine if they have specific and unique treatment and rehabilitation needs, whether certain practical modifications to treatment protocols might be necessary, and whether completion rates and treatment adherence and response are similar.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Oct 2024
Transcranial transmission ultrasound for reliable non-invasive exclusion of intracranial hypertension in traumatic brain injury patients -A proof of concept study.
For many years, noninvasive methods to measure intracranial pressure (ICP) have been unsuccessful. However, such methods are crucial for the assessment of patients with nonpenetrating traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) who are unconscious. In this study, we explored the use of transcranial transmission ultrasound (TTUS) to gather experimental data through brain pulsatility, assessing its effectiveness in detecting high ICP using machine learning analysis. ⋯ It achieved a 100% negative predictive value and a 14% positive predictive value. This suggests that TTUS can accurately rule out high ICP above 15 mmHg in TBI patients, indicating patients who may need immediate imaging or intervention. These promising results, if confirmed and expanded in larger studies, could lead to the first reliable, noninvasive screening tool for detecting elevated ICP.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Oct 2024
White Matter Hyperintensities and Microstructural Alterations in Contact Sport Athletes from Adolescence to Early Midlife.
Studies have demonstrated associations between cumulative concussion and repetitive head impact exposure (RHI) through contact sports with white matter (WM) alterations later in life. The course of WM changes associated with exposure earlier in the lifespan is unclear. This study investigated alterations in white matter (WM hyperintensity [WMH] volume and microstructural changes) associated with concussion and RHI exposure from adolescence to early midlife, as well as the interaction between exposure and age cohort (i.e., adolescent/young adult compared with early midlife athlete cohorts) on WM outcomes. ⋯ Performance on a measure of executive function was significantly associated with years of participation, ρ = 0.34, p = 0.04, and a trend was observed for OD, ρ = 0.28, p = 0.09 in the early midlife cohort only. The global characterization of white matter changes associated with years of football participation were broadly similar and stable from adolescence through early midlife (i.e., microstructural alterations, but not macroscopic lesions). An inverse association between years of participation and orientation dispersion across age cohorts may represent a process of initial recovery/reorganization proximal to sport, followed by later reduction of white matter coherence.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Oct 2024
Recovery Potential in Patients Who Died After Withdrawal of Life-Sustaining Treatment: A TRACK-TBI Propensity Score Analysis.
Among patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), there is high prognostic uncertainty but growing evidence that recovery of independence is possible. Nevertheless, families are often asked to make decisions about withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment (WLST) within days of injury. The range of potential outcomes for patients who died after WLST (WLST+) is unknown, posing a challenge for prognostic modeling and clinical counseling. ⋯ These results suggest a substantial proportion of patients with TBI and WLST may have survived and achieved at least partial independence. However, death or severe disability is a common outcome when the probability of WLST is high. While further validation is needed, our findings support a more cautious clinical approach to WLST and more complete reporting on WLST in TBI studies.