Biomedical Research & Operations Department, Navy Experimental Diving Unit, Panama City Beach, Florida, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Nov 27;8(11):e79595. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079595. eCollection 2013.
Computerized neurocognitive testing (NCAT) has been proposed to be useful as a screening tool for post-deployment cognitive deficits in the setting of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). We assessed the clinical utility of post-injury/post-deployment Automated Neurocognitive Assessment Metric (ANAM) testing, using a longitudinal design to compare baseline ANAM tests with two post-deployment ANAM tests in a group of Marines who experienced combat during deployment.
Post-deployment cognitive performance and symptom recovery were compared in a subsample of 1324 U.S. Marines with high rates of combat exposure during deployment. Of the sample, 169 Marines had available baseline and twice repeated post-deployment ANAM results. A retrospective analysis of the ANAM data, which consisted of a self-report questionnaire about deployment-related blast exposure, recent history of mTBI, current clinical symptoms, and cognitive performance. Self-reported concussion sustained anytime during deployment was associated with a decrease in cognitive performance measured between 2-8 weeks post-deployment. At the second post-deployment test conducted on average eight months later, performance on the second simple reaction time test, in particular, remained impaired and was the most consistent and sensitive indicator of the cognitive decrements. Additionally, post-concussive symptoms were shown to persist in injured Marines with a self-reported history of concussion for an additional five months after most cognitive deficits resolved. Results of this study showed a measurable deployment effect on cognitive performance, although this effect appears to resolve without lasting clinical sequelae in those without history of deployment-related concussion.
These results highlight the need for a detailed clinical examination for service members with history of concussion and persistent clinical symptoms. Reliance solely upon computerized neurocognitive testing as a method for identifying service members requiring clinical follow-up post-concussion is not recommended, as cognitive functioning only slowly returned to baseline levels in the setting of persistent clinical symptoms.
计算机化神经认知测试(NCAT)已被提议作为轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)后认知缺陷的筛查工具。我们使用纵向设计评估了损伤后/部署后自动化神经认知评估指标(ANAM)测试的临床实用性,比较了一组在部署期间经历过战斗的海军陆战队员的基线 ANAM 测试和两次部署后 ANAM 测试。
在经历过高比例战斗暴露的 1324 名美国海军陆战队员亚组中,比较了部署后的认知表现和症状恢复情况。在该样本中,有 169 名海军陆战队员有可用的基线和两次重复的部署后 ANAM 结果。对 ANAM 数据进行了回顾性分析,该数据包括一份关于部署相关爆炸暴露、近期 mTBI 史、当前临床症状和认知表现的自我报告问卷。在部署期间任何时候报告的脑震荡与 2-8 周后测量的认知表现下降有关。在平均八个月后进行的第二次部署后测试中,特别是第二次简单反应时间测试的表现仍然受损,是认知下降最一致和敏感的指标。此外,在大多数认知缺陷解决后五个月,仍有报告脑震荡史的受伤海军陆战队员表现出持续性的脑震荡后症状。本研究结果表明,认知表现受到可衡量的部署影响,但在没有与部署相关的脑震荡史的人中,这种影响似乎会在没有持久临床后遗症的情况下得到解决。
这些结果强调了对有脑震荡史和持续临床症状的军人进行详细临床检查的必要性。仅依靠计算机化神经认知测试作为识别需要临床随访的脑震荡后军人的方法是不可取的,因为在持续存在临床症状的情况下,认知功能仅缓慢恢复到基线水平。