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Journal Article

Citation

Sonnenberg LK, Dupuis A, Rumney PG. Brain Inj. 2010; 24(7-8): 1003-1007.

Affiliation

Division of NeuroDevelopmental/NeuroMotor Paediatrics, Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/02699052.2010.489033

PMID

20545454

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To confirm the clinical impression that younger pre-school children (<4 years at time of injury) who are referred to a tertiary care centre for management with moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) have poorer social, cognitive, physical and emotional outcomes compared to older pre-schoolers (4-6 years at time of injury) and to describe the prevalence and severity of their social impairment at 8 years of age. METHODS: This is a retrospective review of pre-schoolers with moderate-to-severe TBI from 1995-2009. Their social, cognitive, physical and emotional outcomes were assessed at 8 years of age using the Mayo-Portland Adaptability Inventory-Paediatric. RESULTS: Of 130 pre-schoolers enrolled in the database who sustained a TBI < 6 years, 93 were seen at 8 years of age (57 males, 36 females). Younger pre-schoolers (n = 61, mean 2.6 years) had inferior social outcomes (p = 0.04) and cognitive abilities (p = 0.006), trended toward poorer physical outcomes (p = 0.1), with no difference for emotional outcomes (p = 0.2), compared to older pre-schoolers (n = 32, mean 5.0 years). Overall, 19/93 had normal social function, 38/93 had mild impairment, 21/93 had moderate impairment and 15/93 had severe impairment to social function. CONCLUSIONS: Children <4 years at the time of moderate-to-severe TBI have poorer social, cognitive and physical outcomes compared to older pre-schoolers.


Language: en

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