Department of Psychiatry, School of Psychology and College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
National Institute for Health Research, Surgical Reconstruction and Microbiology Research Centre, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 Feb 19;9(2):e021675. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-021675.
To estimate the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a large civilian population with traumatic brain injury (TBI), and to assess whether brain injury severity is correlated with PTSD symptoms.
Observational, cross-sectional study.
Outpatient clinic in a major UK trauma centre and secondary care hospital. Estimates of PTSD prevalence are based on 171 sampled individuals attending TBI clinic within an 18-month period. Analysis of the relationship between TBI severity and PTSD was performed on the subset of 127 patients for whom injury severity data were also available.
Civilian TBI clinic attendees completed validated self-report questionnaires assessing PTSD (PTSD Checklist Civilian Version (PCL-C)) and other psychiatric symptoms. From this, the prevalence of PTSD was estimated in our cohort. Postresuscitation Glasgow Coma Score and Marshall grade on CT brain scan were recorded as indicators of brain injury severity. A hierarchical regression explored whether TBI severity may predict PTSD scores.
A high prevalence of PTSD was estimated (21% with PCL-C score >50). Higher Marshall grading displayed a slight negative correlation with PTSD symptoms. This statistically significant relationship persisted after confounding factors such as depression and postconcussion symptoms were controlled for.
PTSD and TBI frequently coexist, share antecedents and overlap in their resultant symptoms. This complexity has given rise to conflicting hypotheses about relationships between the two. This research reveals that PTSD is common in civilians with TBI (adding to evidence drawn from military populations). The analysis indicated that more severe brain injury may exert a slight protective influence against the development of PTSD-potentially by disrupting implicit access to traumatic memories, or via overlapping neuropsychiatric symptoms that impede diagnosis. The association suggests that further research is warranted to explore the reuse of routine clinical and neuroimaging data-investigating its potential to predict risk of psychiatric morbidity.
在一个有大量创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的平民人群中,估计创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的患病率,并评估脑损伤严重程度是否与 PTSD 症状相关。
观察性、横断面研究。
在英国一家主要创伤中心和二级保健医院的门诊诊所。通过对 18 个月内参加 TBI 诊所的 171 名抽样个体进行研究,估计 PTSD 的患病率。对 127 名患者进行了分析,这些患者也有损伤严重程度的数据。
TBI 诊所就诊者完成了评估 PTSD(平民版 PTSD 清单(PCL-C))和其他精神症状的有效自评问卷。从这一点出发,估计了我们队列中的 PTSD 患病率。记录脑复苏格拉斯哥昏迷评分和 CT 脑扫描上的马歇尔分级,作为脑损伤严重程度的指标。分层回归探讨了 TBI 严重程度是否可以预测 PTSD 评分。
估计 PTSD 的患病率较高(PCL-C 评分>50 的患者占 21%)。较高的马歇尔分级与 PTSD 症状呈轻微负相关。在控制了抑郁和脑震荡后症状等混杂因素后,这种统计学上显著的关系仍然存在。
PTSD 和 TBI 经常同时发生,它们的发病前因素和结果症状重叠。这种复杂性导致了关于两者之间关系的相互矛盾的假设。这项研究表明,创伤性脑损伤的平民中 PTSD 很常见(这增加了来自军事人群的证据)。分析表明,更严重的脑损伤可能对 PTSD 的发展产生轻微的保护作用,这可能是通过破坏对创伤性记忆的内隐访问,或者通过阻碍诊断的重叠神经精神症状来实现的。这种关联表明,有必要进一步研究探索常规临床和神经影像学数据的再利用,以调查其预测精神疾病发病率的潜力。