Department of Psychiatry, Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.
Rady Children's Hospital, San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 2021 Dec;38(23):3341-3351. doi: 10.1089/neu.2021.0324.
The objective was to clarify occurrence, phenomenology, and risk factors for novel psychiatric disorder (NPD) in the first 3 months after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and orthopedic injury (OI). Children aged 8-15 years with mTBI ( = 220) and with OI but no TBI ( = 110) from consecutive admissions to an emergency department were followed prospectively at baseline and 3 months post-injury with semi-structured psychiatric interviews to document the number of NPDs that developed in each participant. Pre-injury child variables (adaptive, cognitive, and academic function, and psychiatric disorder), pre-injury family variables (socioeconomic status, family psychiatric history, and family function), and injury severity were assessed and analyzed as potential confounders and predictors of NPD. NPD occurred at a significantly higher frequency in children with mTBI versus OI in analyses unadjusted (mean ratio [MR] 3.647, 95% confidence interval [CI] (1.264, 15.405), = 0.014) and adjusted (MR = 3.724, CI (1.264, 15.945), = 0.015) for potential confounders. In multi-predictor analyses, the factors besides mTBI that were significantly associated with higher NPD frequency after adjustment for each other were pre-injury lifetime psychiatric disorder [MR = 2.284, CI (1.026, 5.305), = 0.043]; high versus low family psychiatric history [MR = 2.748, CI (1.201, 6.839), = 0.016], and worse socio-economic status [MR = 0.618 per additional unit, CI (0.383, 0.973), = 0.037]. These findings demonstrate that mild injury to the brain compared with an OI had a significantly greater deleterious effect on psychiatric outcome in the first 3 months post-injury. This effect was present even after accounting for specific child and family variables, which were themselves independently related to the adverse psychiatric outcome.
目的是阐明轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)和骨科损伤(OI)后 3 个月内新型精神障碍(NPD)的发生、表现和危险因素。连续收治于急诊科的 8-15 岁 mTBI( = 220)和无 TBI 的 OI 患儿( = 110)前瞻性随访基线和损伤后 3 个月,采用半定式精神病学访谈记录每位参与者中发生的 NPD 数量。在分析中,评估并分析了损伤前儿童变量(适应性、认知和学业功能以及精神障碍)、损伤前家庭变量(社会经济地位、家庭精神病史和家庭功能)和损伤严重程度,以确定其是否为 NPD 的潜在混杂因素和预测因素。在未调整分析中,mTBI 患儿的 NPD 发生率显著高于 OI 患儿(平均比值[MR]3.647,95%置信区间[CI](1.264,15.405), = 0.014)和调整分析中(MR = 3.724,CI(1.264,15.945), = 0.015)考虑了潜在的混杂因素。在多预测因素分析中,除 mTBI 外,其他与调整后 NPD 频率较高显著相关的因素包括:损伤前终生精神障碍[MR = 2.284,CI(1.026,5.305), = 0.043];高家族精神病史与低家族精神病史相比[MR = 2.748,CI(1.201,6.839), = 0.016],较差的社会经济地位[MR = 每增加一个单位 0.618,CI(0.383,0.973), = 0.037]。这些发现表明,与 OI 相比,轻度脑损伤对损伤后 3 个月内的精神预后有更显著的不良影响。即使考虑到特定的儿童和家庭变量,这些变量本身与不良的精神预后独立相关,这种影响仍然存在。