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Journal Article

Citation

Henry GK, Gross HS, Herndon CA, Fürst CJ. Appl. Neuropsychol. 2000; 7(2): 65-75.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1207/S15324826AN0702_1

PMID

10863600

Abstract

This retrospective clinical study investigated the neuropsychological, physiological, and behavioral functioning of 32 adult outpatients up to 65 months following nonimpact brain injury (i.e., whiplash). All participants were administered a flexible battery of cognitive tests, and some underwent neurodiagnostic procedures and sleep studies. Compared with published norms, neuropsychological data revealed significant and persistent age-adjusted cognitive deficits, primarily in the area of executive functioning. Participants frequently complained of problems with behavioral control, sleep, and sexuality. Although structural neuroimaging was not sensitive in detecting brain pathology, quantitative electroencephalography was abnormal in all the participants evaluated, showing frontocentral slowing and increased spike wave activity. We propose that whiplash injury can produce wide-ranging circuitry dysfunction and that test selection is critical in identifying cognitive deficits.


Language: en

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