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Journal Article

Citation

Anderson V, Catroppa C. Brain Inj. 2007; 21(13): 1399-1409.

Affiliation

Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/02699050701785070

PMID

18066942

Abstract

Primary objective: This study seeks to extend previous findings by documenting memory performance in a sample of 70 children at 5 years post-injury. It was anticipated that increasing injury severity would be associated with decreased performance on working and complex memory tasks. It was also expected that injury severity would significantly predict memory, but that the time from insult to subsequent testing would be associated with an increased relationship to non-injury factors. Research design: Participants were assessed at 5 years post-injury, aged between 6-14 years, using measures of immediate, working and complex memory. Methods and procedures: The sample comprised 18 children who had sustained a severe TBI, 24 with a moderate TBI, 11 with a mild TBI and 17 healthy controls, matched for age, gender and socio-economic-status. Results: Results indicated that severe TBI was associated with decreased complex auditory-verbal memory performance, although children with TBI did not display impairment on immediate, working or complex visual-spatial memory. While injury severity significantly predicted complex memory outcome, non-injury factors failed to significantly predict either working or complex memory performance. Conclusions: Future research should be engineered towards further clarifying what influences recovery from childhood TBI in the elongated post-injury period.


Language: en

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