Psychological Factors Associated with Delayed Symptom Resolution in Children with Concussion - 24/06/16
Abstract |
Objective |
To characterize the psychological factors associated with persistent symptoms after pediatric concussion.
Study design |
Longitudinal cohort study of 179 children with concussion 8-18 years old evaluated in a pediatric emergency department. Participants were followed for 1 month for delayed symptom resolution, defined as ≥3 symptoms that were new/worse than preinjury symptoms measured by the use of graded symptom inventory. Preinjury psychological traits were measured by parental report on subscales of the Personality Inventory for Children-2 (maladjustment, cognitive abilities, somatization). Child report of postinjury anxiety and injury perception were measured with the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children and Children's Illness Perception Questionnaire. Psychological instrument scores were compared between those with and without delayed symptom resolution via a Kruskal-Wallis test. Associations between psychological traits and delayed symptom resolution were investigated by the use of logistic regression.
Results |
Delayed symptom resolution occurred in 21% of participants. Score distributions were significantly worse on the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children (38 [IQR 33-40] vs 35 [IQR 31-39]; P = .04) and somatization subscale (1 [IQR 0-3] vs 1 [IQR 0-1]; P = .01) among children with delayed symptom resolution compared with children with early symptom resolution. Somatization was associated with delayed symptom resolution (aOR 1.35, 95% CI 1.08-1.69). The proportion of children with abnormal somatization scores was significantly greater in the delayed symptom resolution group (34.2%) than the early symptom resolution group (12.8%; P < .01). Other psychological measures were not different between groups.
Conclusion |
Somatization is associated with delayed symptom resolution in this cohort of children with concussion. Postconcussive symptoms lasting at least 1 month may warrant referral to a neuropsychologist familiar with postconcussion care.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : mild traumatic brain injury, emergency department, postconcussive syndrome, concussion, children, somatization, anxiety
Abbreviations : CIPQ, COG1, CT, DIS-S, ED, GCS, PIC-2, SOM, STAIC
Plan
J.G. received salary support from the Thrasher Research Fund Early Career Award to conduct the study and the National Institutes of Health/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences through Colorado Clinical & Translational Science Institute (UL1 TR000154 [REDCap]). The authors declare no conflicts of interest. |
Vol 174
P. 27 - juillet 2016 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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