Traumatic Brain Injury in Patients With Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: Clinical and Economic Consequences

Abstract Bradbury CL, Wodchis WP, Mikulis DJ, Pano EG, Hitzig SL, McGillivray CF, Ahmad FN, Craven BC, Green RE. Traumatic brain injury in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury: clinical and economic consequences. Objective To evaluate the clinical and economic burden of traumatic brain injury...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 2008-12, Vol.89 (12), p.S77-S84
Hauptverfasser: Bradbury, Cheryl L., PsyD, CPsych, Wodchis, Walter P., PhD, Mikulis, David J., MD, Pano, Ephrem G., BSc, MSc (Cand), Hitzig, Sander L., MA, McGillivray, Colleen F., MD, Ahmad, Fahad N., BSc, Craven, B. Catherine, MD, Green, Robin E., PhD, CPsych
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Bradbury CL, Wodchis WP, Mikulis DJ, Pano EG, Hitzig SL, McGillivray CF, Ahmad FN, Craven BC, Green RE. Traumatic brain injury in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury: clinical and economic consequences. Objective To evaluate the clinical and economic burden of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in people with traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). Design Prospective, case-matched control study. Setting Inpatient spinal cord rehabilitation program. Participants Patients (n=10) diagnosed with traumatic SCI and concomitant TBI matched to an SCI only control group. Interventions Not applicable. Main Outcome Measures Inpatient rehabilitation length of stay, health care costs (patient care hours), clinician resource allocation, behavioral and critical incidents, FIM, Personality Assessment Inventory, and neuropsychological assessment findings. Results Prolonged loss of consciousness, increased rehabilitation costs, and greater demands on clinician recourses (trend) were found in the SCI with TBI group relative to the SCI-only group. Neuropsychological test performance was significantly worse in the SCI with TBI group, while the FIM cognition score did not discriminate because of ceiling effects. Greater evidence of psychopathology was observed in the SCI with TBI group. Conclusions The presence of TBI in SCI has a range of clinical and economic consequences. This dual diagnosis has the potential to affect SCI rehabilitation negatively, as well as quality of life and reintegration in the community. Specialized care appears to be needed to improve outcomes and to minimize clinical and economic burden, but further research is required.
ISSN:0003-9993
1532-821X
DOI:10.1016/j.apmr.2008.07.008