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Functional Recovery After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: An Individual Growth Curve Approach
Authors:Tessa Hart  Allan J. Kozlowski  John Whyte  Ingrid Poulsen  Karin Kristensen  Annette Nordenbo  Allen W. Heinemann
Affiliation:1. Moss Rehabilitation Research Institute, Elkins Park, PA;2. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY;3. Department of Neurorehabilitation, Traumatic Brain Injury Unit, Research Unit on Brain Injury Rehabilitation, Glostrup Hospital, Copenhagen University, Copenhagen, Denmark;4. Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL;5. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL
Abstract:

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.
Keywords:Brain injuries   Rehabilitation
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