School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (Drs Bogdanov and Lah); Rehab2Kids Rehabilitation Unit (Ms Brookes and Dr Epps) and Department of Sleep Medicine (Dr Teng), Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, New South Wales, Australia; Brain and Mind Centre and Charles Perkins Centre, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (Dr Naismith); School of Paediatrics and Women's Health, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales, Australia (Dr Teng); and ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders, Macquarie University, Macquarie Park, New South Wales, Australia (Dr Lah).
J Head Trauma Rehabil. 2021;36(2):E108-E117. doi: 10.1097/HTR.0000000000000585.
To characterize fatigue in children with moderate or severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to identify associated factors.
Urban tertiary pediatric healthcare facility.
Children aged 5 to 15 years with a moderate TBI (n = 21), severe TBI (n = 23), or an orthopedic injury (OI; n = 38).
Case-control study.
(i) Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Multidimensional Fatigue Scale (PedsQL-MFS), completed by parents and children; (ii) Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children, completed by parents. Data on injury-specific factors and other factors of interest were also collected.
The 2 TBI groups did not differ on any of the fatigue outcomes (child or parent ratings). Relative to the OI group, parents rated children in both TBI groups as experiencing greater fatigue. However, on self-ratings, only children with moderate TBI endorsed greater fatigue. Sleep was commonly associated with fatigue, with child sleep disturbance and child sleep hygiene associated with parent-rated and self-rated child fatigue, respectively. Individually, there were no cases of "normal" fatigue coinciding with severe sleep disturbance. However, there were several cases of severe fatigue coinciding with normal sleep. Additional factors associated with fatigue were older age at injury, longer time since injury, and/or greater internalizing difficulties.
Children with moderate and severe TBI experience greater fatigue than OI controls. Parent and child ratings of fatigue appear to be associated with different factors, indicating that fatigue management may require a broad range of treatments.
描述中重度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患儿的疲劳特征,并确定相关因素。
城市三级儿科医疗机构。
年龄在 5 至 15 岁之间的中度 TBI(n=21)、重度 TBI(n=23)或骨科损伤(OI;n=38)患儿。
病例对照研究。
(i)父母和儿童完成的儿童生活质量量表多维疲劳量表(PedsQL-MFS);(ii)父母完成的儿童睡眠障碍量表。还收集了与损伤特异性因素和其他相关因素有关的数据。
2 个 TBI 组在任何疲劳结果(儿童或父母评分)上均无差异。与 OI 组相比,父母均认为 TBI 组的儿童经历了更大的疲劳。然而,在自我评分中,只有中度 TBI 的儿童报告了更大的疲劳。睡眠通常与疲劳有关,儿童睡眠障碍与儿童睡眠卫生与父母评定和自我评定的儿童疲劳分别相关。单独来看,没有“正常”疲劳与严重睡眠障碍同时存在的情况。然而,有几个严重疲劳与正常睡眠同时存在的情况。与疲劳相关的其他因素包括受伤时年龄较大、受伤后时间较长和/或内化困难较大。
中重度 TBI 患儿比 OI 对照组经历更大的疲劳。疲劳的父母和儿童评分似乎与不同的因素相关,这表明疲劳管理可能需要广泛的治疗方法。