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Rodger A. Weddell 《Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation》2010,91(6):897-299
Weddell RA. Relatives' criticism influences adjustment and outcome after traumatic brain injury.
Objectives
To apply some of the methods developed to study the effects of relatives' expressed emotion (EE) on psychiatric relapse rates and to test the prediction that relatives' criticism and psychiatric distress would be associated with outcome and emotional distress after traumatic brain injury (TBI).Design
Retrospective cohort design with correlational analyses of quantitative and qualitative measures of TBI outcomes.Setting
The author interviewed participants in the hospital. The research assistant interviewed close relatives at home.Participants
Participants and relatives (N=78) were interviewed 34.3±15.2 months (mean ± SD) after a severe TBI.Interventions
None.Main Outcome Measures
Dependent variables in a series of hierarchical linear regression models were participants' scores on the Zung Depression Scale, Spielberger Trait Anxiety Inventory, State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory, an Anger Towards Relative questionnaire constructed for this study, and Extended Glasgow Outcome Scores. Participant-independent variables were social class, posttraumatic amnesia, Wechsler Memory Scale-Delayed Recall score, WAIS-R intelligence quotient, and a short version of the Smell Identification Test. Relative independent variables were the number of critical comments directed toward participants in the interview and psychiatric distress as measured by the General Health Questionnaire.Results
The contributions of variance associated with relative independent variables (predominantly criticism) were significant in stage 2 of most hierarchical regression analyses after the adjustments for variance associated with participant independent variables made in stage 1.Conclusions
Future application of EE research methods is warranted. If the present results are replicated, then evidence-based family interventions developed by EE researchers to reduce criticism might also improve TBI outcomes. 相似文献6.
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Gavin Williams Meg E. Morris Anthony Schache Paul R. McCrory 《Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation》2009,90(4):587-593
Williams G, Morris ME, Schache A, McCrory PR. Incidence of gait abnormalities after traumatic brain injury.
Objective
To identify the most common gait abnormalities presenting after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and quantify their incidence rate.Design
Case series.Setting
Biomechanics laboratory.Participants
A convenience sample of 41 people with TBI receiving therapy for gait abnormalities, and a sample of 25 healthy controls.Intervention
Three-dimensional gait analysis.Main Outcome Measures
Spatiotemporal, kinematic, and kinetic data at a self-selected walking speed.Results
People with TBI walked with a significantly slower speed than matched healthy controls. There was a significant difference between groups for cadence, step length, stance time on the affected leg, double support phase, and width of base of support. The most frequently observed biomechanical abnormality was excessive knee flexion at initial foot contact. Other significant gait abnormalities were increased trunk anterior/posterior amplitude of movement, increased anterior pelvic tilt, increased peak pelvic obliquity, reduced peak knee flexion at toe-off, and increased lateral center of mass displacement. Ankle equinovarus at foot-contact occurred infrequently.Conclusions
People with TBI were found to have multijoint gait abnormalities. Many of these abnormalities have not been previously reported in this population. 相似文献9.
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Tessa Hart Allan J. Kozlowski John Whyte Ingrid Poulsen Karin Kristensen Annette Nordenbo Allen W. Heinemann 《Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation》2014
Objective
To examine person, injury, and treatment characteristics associated with recovery trajectories of people with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) during inpatient rehabilitation.Design
Observational prospective longitudinal study.Setting
TBI rehabilitation units.Participants
Adults (N=206) with severe nonpenetrating TBI admitted directly to inpatient rehabilitation from acute care. Participants were excluded for prior disability and intentional etiology of injury.Interventions
Naturally occurring treatments delivered within comprehensive multidisciplinary teams were recorded daily in 15-minute units provided to patients and family members, separately.Main Outcome Measures
Motor and cognitive FIM were measured on admission, discharge, and every 2 weeks in between and were analyzed with individual growth curve methodology.Results
Inpatient recovery was best modeled with linear, cubic, and quadratic components: relatively steep recovery was followed by deceleration of improvement, which attenuated prior to discharge. Slower recovery was associated with older age, longer coma, and interruptions to rehabilitation. Patients admitted at lower functional levels received more treatment, and more treatment was associated with slower recovery, presumably because treatment was allocated according to need. Therefore, effects of treatment on outcome could not be disentangled from effects of case mix factors.Conclusions
FIM gain during inpatient recovery from severe TBI is not a linear process. In observational studies, the specific effects of treatment on rehabilitation outcomes are difficult to separate from case mix factors that are associated with both outcome and allocation of treatment. 相似文献11.
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Christine L. Karver Brad Kurowski Erin A. Semple Terry Stancin H. Gerry Taylor Keith O. Yeates Nicolay C. Walz Shari L. Wade 《Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation》2014
Objective
To examine associations of clinical need, defined by elevated parent ratings of child behavior problems and utilization of behavioral health services in young children with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and an orthopedic injury (OI) comparison group.Design
Parents completed outcome measures 18 months after injury and at an extended follow-up conducted an average of 38 months postinjury.Setting
Children's hospitals and a general hospital.Participants
Participants included parents of 3 groups of children injured between 3 and 7 years of age (N=139): 47 children with complicated mild to moderate TBI, 18 with severe TBI, and 74 with OI.Interventions
Not applicable.Main Outcome Measures
Parents completed ratings of child behavior, mental health symptomology, and family functioning at both visits; at the extended follow-up, they reported utilization of behavior therapy or counseling services since the 18-month follow-up visit.Results
Children with TBI had more behavior problems than those with OI. Although clinical need at both follow-ups was associated with greater service utilization at the extended follow-up, all groups had unmet needs as defined by a clinical need in the absence of services. Lower socioeconomic status was associated with higher rates of unmet need across groups.Conclusions
The results document unmet long-term behavioral health needs after both TBI and OI in children and underscore the importance of monitoring and treatment of postinjury behavior problems. 相似文献19.