Bell Kathleen R, Fann Jesse R, Brockway Jo Ann, Cole Wesley R, Bush Nigel E, Dikmen Sureyya, Hart Tessa, Lang Ariel J, Grant Gerald, Gahm Gregory, Reger Mark A, St De Lore Jef, Machamer Joan, Ernstrom Karin, Raman Rema, Jain Sonia, Stein Murray B, Temkin Nancy
1 Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington.
2 Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington.
J Neurotrauma. 2017 Jan 15;34(2):313-321. doi: 10.1089/neu.2016.4444. Epub 2016 Oct 13.
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a common injury for service members in recent military conflicts. There is insufficient evidence of how best to treat the consequences of mTBI. In a randomized, clinical trial, we evaluated the efficacy of telephone-delivered problem-solving treatment (PST) on psychological and physical symptoms in 356 post-deployment active duty service members from Joint Base Lewis McChord, Washington, and Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Members with medically confirmed mTBI sustained during deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan within the previous 24 months received PST or education-only (EO) interventions. The PST group received up to 12 biweekly telephone calls from a counselor for subject-selected problems. Both groups received 12 educational brochures describing common mTBI and post-deployment problems, with follow-up for all at 6 months (end of PST), and at 12 months. At 6 months, the PST group significantly improved on a measure of psychological distress (Brief Symptom Inventory; BSI-18) compared to the EO group (p = 0.005), but not on post-concussion symptoms (Rivermead Post-Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire [RPQ]; p = 0.19), the two primary endpoints. However, these effects did not persist at 12-month follow-up (BSI, p = 0.54; RPQ, p = 0.45). The PST group also had significant short-term improvement on secondary endpoints, including sleep (p = 0.01), depression (p = 0.03), post-traumatic stress disorder (p = 0.04), and physical functioning (p = 0.03). Participants preferred PST over EO (p < 0.001). Telephone-delivered PST appears to be a well-accepted treatment that offers promise for reducing psychological distress after combat-related mTBI and could be a useful adjunct treatment post-mTBI. Further studies are required to determine how to sustain its effects. (Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01387490 https://clinicaltrials.gov ).
轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)是近期军事冲突中军人的常见损伤。对于如何最佳治疗mTBI的后果,目前证据不足。在一项随机临床试验中,我们评估了通过电话提供的解决问题疗法(PST)对来自华盛顿州刘易斯-麦科德联合基地和北卡罗来纳州布拉格堡的356名部署后现役军人心理和身体症状的疗效。在过去24个月内在伊拉克和阿富汗部署期间医学确诊为mTBI的军人接受了PST或仅接受教育(EO)干预。PST组就自选问题接受了来自咨询师的最多12次每两周一次的电话咨询。两组均收到了12份描述常见mTBI和部署后问题的教育手册,并在6个月(PST结束时)和12个月时进行随访。在6个月时,与EO组相比,PST组在心理困扰测量指标(简明症状量表;BSI-18)上有显著改善(p = 0.005),但在脑震荡后症状(Rivermead脑震荡后症状问卷[RPQ];p = 0.19)方面没有改善,这是两个主要终点。然而,这些效果在12个月随访时并未持续(BSI,p = 0.54;RPQ,p = 0.45)。PST组在次要终点方面也有显著的短期改善,包括睡眠(p = 0.01)、抑郁(p = 0.03)、创伤后应激障碍(p = 0.04)和身体功能(p = 0.03)。参与者更喜欢PST而非EO(p < 0.001)。通过电话提供的PST似乎是一种广受欢迎的治疗方法,有望减轻与战斗相关的mTBI后的心理困扰,并且可能是mTBI后的一种有用辅助治疗方法。需要进一步研究以确定如何维持其效果。(试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT01387490 https://clinicaltrials.gov )