This study provides a longitudinal follow-up of the behavioral adjustment of 45 children with mild, moderate, and severe closed head injuries. Two measures of behavioral adjustment, the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) and the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales (VABS), were obtained from a parent at the time of injury and at 6 and 12 months postinjury. The severely injured children obtained significantly poorer VABS scores than children with mild and moderate injuries over the year-long follow-up. In addition, on the CBCL, severely injured children had more school problems and engaged in fewer social activities than mild and moderately injured children. These results show that severe head injury in children was associated with declines in adaptive functioning, whereas scores for children with mild and moderate injuries did not differ, nor did they deviate from average levels at any follow-up interval.
Neuropsychological outcome was evaluated in a prospective,
longitudinal follow-up study of children age 4 months to
7 years at injury with either mild-to-moderate (N
= 35) or severe (N = 44) traumatic brain injury
(TBI). Age-appropriate tests were administered at baseline,
6 months, 12 months, and 24 months after the injury. Performance
was compared on (1) composite IQ and motor, (2) receptive
and expressive language, and (3) Verbal and Perceptual–Performance
IQ scores. In comparison to mild-to-moderate TBI, severe
TBI in infants and preschoolers produced deficits in all
areas. Interactions between task and severity of injury
were obtained. Motor scores were lower than IQ scores,
particularly after severe TBI. Both receptive and expressive
scores were reduced following severe TBI. Expressive language
scores were lower than receptive language scores for children
sustaining mild-to-moderate TBI. While severe TBI lowered
both Verbal and Perceptual– Performance IQ scores,
Verbal IQ scores were significantly lower than Perceptual–Performance
IQ scores after mild-to-moderate TBI. Mild injuries may
produce subtle linguistic changes adversely impacting estimates
of Verbal IQ and expressive language. Within the limited
age range evaluated within this study, age at injury was
unrelated to test scores: The impact of TBI was comparable
in children ages 4 to 41 months versus 42 to 72
months at the time of injury. All neuropsychological scores
improved significantly from baseline to the 6-month follow-up.
However, no further change in scores was observed from
6 to 24 months after the injury. The persistent deficits
and lack of catch-up over time suggest a reduction in the
rate of acquisition of new skills after severe TBI. Methodological
issues in longitudinal studies of young children were discussed.
(JINS, 1997, 3, 581–591.)
Thirty-seven magnetic resonance (MR) imaging studies were performed with a 1.5-T magnet and surface coils in 27 patients with suspected spinal cord injuries. Imaging was performed 1 day to 6 weeks after injury. Cord abnormalities were seen with MR in 19 patients, while skeletal and/or ligamentous injuries were seen in 21 (78%). Three types of MR signal patterns were seen in association with cord injuries. Acute intraspinal hemorrhage was seen in five patients with cord injuries and demonstrated decreased signal intensity on T2-weighted images obtained within 24 hours of injury. Cord edema and contusion had high signal intensity on T2-weighted images and were observed in 12 cases with cord injury. Neurologic recovery, determined in 16 patients, was insignificant in patients with intraspinal hemorrhage; however, patients with cord edema or contusion recovered significant neurologic function. MR at 1.5 T is extremely useful in the diagnosis of acute cord injury and also demonstrates potential in predicting neurologic recovery.
Prospective, longitudinal follow-up of academic status following pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) identified that patients with severe TBI (n = 33) obtained significantly lower reading recognition, spelling, and arithmetic scores than those with mild to moderate TBI (n = 28). Independent of injury severity, adolescents scored lower than children on computational arithmetic and reading comprehension subtests. Although all achievement scores increased significantly from the baseline evaluation to 6 months after the injury, no further change was noted from 6 months to 2 years. Despite average achievement test scores by 2 years after TBI, 79% of the severely injured patients had either failed a grade or received special educational assistance. Traditional achievement tests may be insensitive to posttraumatic academic deficits.
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