Stein Murray B, Ursano Robert J, Campbell-Sills Laura, Colpe Lisa J, Fullerton Carol S, Heeringa Steven G, Nock Matthew K, Sampson Nancy A, Schoenbaum Michael, Sun Xiaoying, Jain Sonia, Kessler Ronald C
1 Departments of Psychiatry and Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California San Diego , La Jolla, California; VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California.
2 Department of Psychiatry, Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences , Bethesda, Maryland.
J Neurotrauma. 2016 Dec 1;33(23):2125-2132. doi: 10.1089/neu.2015.4320. Epub 2016 Apr 8.
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), or concussion, is prevalent in the military. The course of recovery can be highly variable. This study investigates whether deployment-acquired mTBI is associated with subsequent presence and severity of post-concussive symptoms (PCS) and identifies predictors of persistent PCS among US Army personnel who sustained mTBI while deployed to Afghanistan. We used data from a prospective longitudinal survey of soldiers assessed 1-2 months before a 10-month deployment to Afghanistan (T0), on redeployment to the United States (T1), approximately 3 months later (T2), and approximately 9 months later (T3). Outcomes of interest were PCS at T2 and T3. Predictors considered were: sociodemographic factors, number of previous deployments, pre-deployment mental health and TBI history, and mTBI and other military-related stress during the index deployment. The study sample comprised 4518 soldiers, 822 (18.2%) of whom experienced mTBI during the index deployment. After adjusting for demographic, clinical, and deployment-related factors, deployment-acquired mTBI was associated with nearly triple the risk of reporting any PCS and with increased severity of PCS when symptoms were present. Among those who sustained mTBI, severity of PCS at follow-up was associated with history of pre-deployment TBI(s), pre-deployment psychological distress, more severe deployment stress, and loss of consciousness or lapse of memory (versus being "dazed" only) as a result of deployment-acquired mTBI. In summary, we found that sustaining mTBI increases risk for persistent PCS. Previous TBI(s), pre-deployment psychological distress, severe deployment stress, and loss of consciousness or lapse of memory resulting from mTBI(s) are prognostic indicators of persistent PCS after an index mTBI. These observations may have actionable implications for prevention of chronic sequelae of mTBI in the military and other settings.
轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI),即脑震荡,在军队中很常见。恢复过程可能差异很大。本研究调查部署期间获得的mTBI是否与随后的脑震荡后症状(PCS)的出现及严重程度相关,并确定在部署到阿富汗期间遭受mTBI的美国陆军人员中持续性PCS的预测因素。我们使用了一项前瞻性纵向调查的数据,该调查对士兵在前往阿富汗进行为期10个月的部署前1 - 2个月(T0)、重新部署到美国时(T1)、大约3个月后(T2)以及大约9个月后(T3)进行了评估。感兴趣的结果是T2和T3时的PCS。考虑的预测因素包括:社会人口统计学因素、先前部署的次数、部署前的心理健康和TBI病史,以及指数部署期间的mTBI和其他与军事相关的压力。研究样本包括4518名士兵,其中822人(18.2%)在指数部署期间经历了mTBI。在调整了人口统计学、临床和与部署相关的因素后,部署期间获得的mTBI与报告任何PCS的风险增加近两倍以及出现症状时PCS严重程度增加相关。在遭受mTBI的人员中,随访时PCS的严重程度与部署前TBI病史、部署前心理困扰、更严重的部署压力以及因部署期间获得的mTBI导致的意识丧失或记忆丧失(与仅“头晕目眩”相比)相关。总之,我们发现遭受mTBI会增加持续性PCS的风险。先前的TBI、部署前心理困扰、严重的部署压力以及mTBI导致的意识丧失或记忆丧失是指数mTBI后持续性PCS的预后指标。这些观察结果可能对预防军队及其他环境中mTBI的慢性后遗症具有实际意义。