Research Service, VA San Diego Healthcare System, USA; Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health, VA San Diego Healthcare System, USA.
Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health, VA San Diego Healthcare System, USA; Psychology Service, VA San Diego Healthcare System, USA.
J Psychiatr Res. 2019 Sep;116:7-13. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2019.05.022. Epub 2019 May 24.
Some providers have expressed hesitation about the appropriateness of PTSD treatment for veterans with a history of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), given concerns that TBI-related sequelae may negatively affect PTSD treatment and/or should be the focus of treatment instead. However, research suggests that those with a history of mTBI can benefit from evidence-based PTSD treatment. To extend these findings, we examined whether specific mTBI injury markers were associated with PTSD treatment attendance and response. Iraq/Afghanistan-era veterans with PTSD and history of mTBI (N = 88) all received Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT; either standard CPT without the trauma account or SMART-CPT, a modified version of CPT that included cognitive rehabilitation strategies). Analyses examined whether time since injury, presence of loss of consciousness (LOC) or posttraumatic amnesia (PTA), and number and mechanism of mTBIs were associated with treatment attendance or response. None of the five injury variables examined were associated with number of treatment sessions attended. Multilevel modeling indicated that injury variables did not moderate treatment response (across treatment conditions) in terms of change in PTSD and depression symptoms. There was a three-way interaction showing that individuals who denied ever experiencing LOC exhibited a greater decrease in PTSD and depression symptoms in standard CPT relative to those in the SMART-CPT. Thus, a history of mTBI should not preclude individuals from receiving standard CPT, regardless of injury characteristics. In fact, PTSD treatment should often be a first line of treatment for these veterans, given evidence of a mental health etiology to persistent post-concussive symptoms.
一些提供者对 PTSD 治疗退伍军人轻度创伤性脑损伤 (mTBI) 的适当性表示犹豫不决,因为他们担心 TBI 相关后遗症可能会对 PTSD 治疗产生负面影响,或者应该成为治疗的重点。然而,研究表明,有 mTBI 病史的人可以从基于证据的 PTSD 治疗中受益。为了扩展这些发现,我们研究了特定的 mTBI 损伤标志物是否与 PTSD 治疗的参与度和反应有关。患有 PTSD 和 mTBI 病史的伊拉克/阿富汗时代退伍军人(N=88)均接受认知加工治疗(CPT;不包括创伤账户的标准 CPT 或 SMART-CPT,一种包括认知康复策略的 CPT 修改版)。分析检查了受伤时间、是否存在意识丧失 (LOC) 或创伤后遗忘症 (PTA)、mTBI 的数量和机制是否与治疗的参与度或反应有关。在研究的五个损伤变量中,没有一个与治疗次数有关。多层次模型表明,损伤变量并没有在 PTSD 和抑郁症状的变化方面调节治疗反应(在治疗条件下)。存在一个三向交互作用,表明否认曾经经历过 LOC 的个体在标准 CPT 中比在 SMART-CPT 中表现出 PTSD 和抑郁症状更大的下降。因此,无论损伤特征如何,mTBI 病史都不应阻止个体接受标准 CPT。事实上,鉴于持续性脑震荡后症状的心理健康病因,这些退伍军人应经常将 PTSD 治疗作为一线治疗。