VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
Division of Epidemiology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 2021 Oct 15;38(20):2841-2850. doi: 10.1089/neu.2021.0015.
Understanding risk for epilepsy among persons who sustain a mild (mTBI) traumatic brain injury (TBI) is crucial for effective intervention and prevention. However, mTBI is frequently undocumented or poorly documented in health records. Further, health records are non-continuous, such as when persons move through health systems (e.g., from Department of Defense to Veterans Affairs [VA] or between jobs in the civilian sector), making population-based assessments of this relationship challenging. Here, we introduce the MINUTE (Military INjuries-Understanding post-Traumatic Epilepsy) study, which integrates data from the Veterans Health Administration with self-report survey data for post-9/11 veterans ( = 2603) with histories of TBI, epilepsy and controls without a history of TBI or epilepsy. This article describes the MINUTE study design, implementation, hypotheses, and initial results across four groups of interest for neurotrauma: 1) control; 2) epilepsy; 3) TBI; and 4) post-traumatic epilepsy (PTE). Using combined survey and health record data, we test hypotheses examining lifetime history of TBI and the differential impacts of TBI, epilepsy, and PTE on quality of life. The MINUTE study revealed high rates of undocumented lifetime TBIs among veterans with epilepsy who had no evidence of TBI in VA medical records. Further, worse physical functioning and health-related quality of life were found for persons with epilepsy + TBI compared to those with either epilepsy or TBI alone. This effect was not fully explained by TBI severity. These insights provide valuable opportunities to optimize the resilience, delivery of health services, and community reintegration of veterans with TBI and complex comorbidity.
了解遭受轻度(mTBI)创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的人患癫痫的风险对于有效干预和预防至关重要。然而,mTBI 在健康记录中经常未被记录或记录不完整。此外,健康记录是不连续的,例如当人们在医疗系统中移动时(例如,从国防部到退伍军人事务部[VA]或在平民部门之间换工作),这使得对这种关系进行基于人群的评估具有挑战性。在这里,我们介绍 MINUTE(军事伤害-理解创伤后癫痫)研究,该研究整合了退伍军人健康管理局的数据和自我报告调查数据,用于有 TBI、癫痫和无 TBI 或癫痫病史的 9/11 后退伍军人( = 2603)。本文描述了 MINUTE 研究设计、实施、假设以及四个神经创伤相关的感兴趣群体的初步结果:1)对照组;2)癫痫组;3)TBI 组;和 4)创伤后癫痫(PTE)组。使用综合调查和健康记录数据,我们测试了假设,检验了一生中 TBI 的历史以及 TBI、癫痫和 PTE 对生活质量的不同影响。MINUTE 研究揭示了癫痫退伍军人中有很高的未记录的终生 TBI 发生率,而 VA 医疗记录中没有 TBI 的证据。此外,与仅患有癫痫或 TBI 的人相比,患有癫痫+TBI 的人的身体功能和健康相关生活质量更差。这种影响不能完全用 TBI 严重程度来解释。这些发现为优化患有 TBI 和复杂合并症的退伍军人的适应能力、提供医疗服务和重返社区提供了宝贵的机会。