Adversity and Resilience Are Associated with Outcome after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Military Service Members.
[2023-11-26 17:19:02]
1 Department of Defense and Veterans Affairs Brain Damage, San Antonio Military Medical Center, San Antonio, Texas; Neurology Clinic, JBSA Foot. Sam Houston Texas
2 San Antonio Healthcare System, Texas, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, San Antonio, Texas Healthcare System, Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center
3 Department of Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School Medical School, Spalding Rehabilitation Hospital, Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital Program, Boston Massachusetts
The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between elasticity after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), stress, post-concussion symptoms and post-traumatic stress symptom report. We assume that elasticity is associated with less symptomatic reporting and adversity is associated with greater symptomatic reporting. This is a cross-sectional study of retrospective data collected by an ongoing TBI repository. By screening mTBI-positive US military members during primary care visits, it is possible to screen trauma history screening (THS), Connor Davidson resilience chart (CD-RISC), neurobehavioral symptom scale (NSI), and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been completed. )) List - Civil Edition (PCL-C). Data collected from February 2015 to August 2016 was used for this study. Participants including only the complete data including the above measurements created a sample size of 165 participants. Both adversity (THS) and elasticity (CD - RISC) scores were significantly associated with the sum of the post - concussion (NSI) and traumatic stress (PCL - C) and subscale scores in the virtual direction. Except for the NSI sensory subscale, all measurements have no interaction between adversity and elasticity. Four traumatic events were significantly associated with most NSI and PCL-C total scores and subscale scores, but the age experienced first by traumatic events showed a nearly nonsignificant correlation. In summary, elasticity and stress are significantly related to symptom recognition after mTBI. Screening for cumulative stress may identify individuals at increased risk for symptoms after persistent concussion and / or posttraumatic stress disorder, and the possibility that symptom severity may be reduced by interventions that increase tolerance There is.
PURPOSE: Military deployment is associated with increased risk of harmful emotions and recognition results. Little is known about the longitudinal association of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), relatively mild traumatic brain injury (TBI), and neurocognitive compromise, especially with regard to long-term outcomes. Relationship The purpose of this study was to examine the long-term relevance of short-term and long-term (more than 5 years) PTSD, neurocognitive ability, and TBI after military deployment. METHODS: In this prospective study, N = 315 US soldiers received an index development of the Iraq war on average 7 people around the military facilities (2003-2005). Six years later (2010 - 2014), as distributed nationwide soldiers, retained soldiers and veterans' rows. The history of TBI comes from clinical interview
Long-term relationship between post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, traumatic brain injury and neurocognitive function of army soldiers deployed in the Iraq War
The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between elasticity after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), stress, post-concussion symptoms and post-traumatic stress symptom report. We assume that elasticity is associated with less symptomatic reporting and adversity is associated with greater symptomatic reporting. This is a cross-sectional study of retrospective data collected by an ongoing TBI repository. By screening mTBI-positive US military members during primary care visits, it is possible to screen trauma history screening (THS), Connor Davidson resilience chart (CD-RISC), neurobehavioral symptom scale (NSI),