Kumar Raj G, Bracken Michael B, Clark Allison N, Nick Todd G, Melguizo Maria S, Sander Angelle M
From the Yale School of Public Health (RGK); Yale School of Public Health, Yale Center for Perinatal, Pediatric, and Environmental Epidemiology, and Department of Neurology, Yale Medical School (MBB), New Haven, Connecticut; Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Baylor College of Medicine/Harris Health System & Brain Injury Research Center, TIRR Memorial Hermann (ANC, AMS), Houston, Texas; and Department of Pediatrics and Department of Biostatistics, College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (TGN, MSM), Little Rock, Arkansas.
Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2014 Aug;93(8):687-702. doi: 10.1097/PHM.0000000000000077.
This study examines the effect of preinjury depressive symptoms on outcomes 3 mos after complicated and uncomplicated cases of mild traumatic brain injury.
Preinjury depressive symptoms, experienced in the 30 days before injury, as measured by retrospective self-report, were assessed within the first 2 wks after injury. The outcome measures assessed at 3 mos after injury included affective/behavioral, cognitive, and physical problems and health-related quality-of-life.
There were 177 patients who completed both the baseline and 3-mo follow-up interviews. The sample was categorized by severity of depressive symptoms in the month before injury as normal, mild, or moderate-severe. Compared with those reporting no preinjury depressive symptoms, persons reporting moderate-severe depressive symptoms had significantly worse outcomes on the Affective and Behavioral and the Cognitive subscales of the Head Injury-Family Interview Problem Checklist and on the 36-item Short-Form Health Survey Mental Component Summary score. The group reporting mild preinjury depressive symptoms scored worse on a measure of cognitive symptoms compared with those with no preinjury depressive symptoms. There was no interaction between preinjury depressive symptoms and severity of the mild traumatic brain injury (complicated or uncomplicated) for any of the outcomes.
Moderate to severe depressive symptoms in the month before injury seems to be a possible risk factor for poor affective/behavioral, cognitive, and mental health-related quality-of-life outcomes at 3 mos after mild traumatic brain injury. Clinicians and researchers should consider the impact of preinjury depression on the recovery process to provide at-risk patients adequate treatment soon after injury.
本研究探讨伤前抑郁症状对轻度创伤性脑损伤复杂和非复杂病例伤后3个月结局的影响。
通过回顾性自我报告测量伤前30天内经历的伤前抑郁症状,在伤后前2周内进行评估。伤后3个月评估的结局指标包括情感/行为、认知和身体问题以及与健康相关的生活质量。
177名患者完成了基线和3个月随访访谈。样本根据伤前一个月抑郁症状的严重程度分为正常、轻度或中度 - 重度。与报告无伤前抑郁症状的人相比,报告中度 - 重度抑郁症状的人在头部损伤 - 家庭访谈问题清单的情感和行为以及认知子量表以及36项简短健康调查心理成分总结评分上的结局明显更差。报告有轻度伤前抑郁症状的组在认知症状测量上的得分比无伤前抑郁症状的组更差。对于任何结局,伤前抑郁症状与轻度创伤性脑损伤的严重程度(复杂或非复杂)之间均无相互作用。
伤前一个月中度至重度抑郁症状似乎是轻度创伤性脑损伤后3个月情感/行为、认知及心理健康相关生活质量不良结局的一个可能危险因素。临床医生和研究人员应考虑伤前抑郁对恢复过程的影响,以便在伤后尽快为高危患者提供充分治疗。