Global Disability Trajectories Over the First Decade Following Combat Concussion

Objective: To examine global disability trajectories in US military with and without traumatic brain injury (TBI) over the first decade following deployment to identify risk profiles for better intervention stratification, hopefully reducing long-term cost. Setting: Patients and participants were enrolled in combat or directly following medical evacuation at the time of injury and followed up every 6 months for 10 years. Participants: There are 4 main groups (n = 475), 2 primary and 2 exploratory: (1) combat-deployed controls without a history of blast exposure “non-blast- control” (n = 143), (2) concussive blast TBI “‘blast-TBI” (n = 236) (primary), (3) combat-deployed controls with a history of blast exposure “blast-control” (n = 54), and (4) patients sustaining a combat concussion not from blast “non-blast-TBI” (n = 42) (exploratory). Design: Prospective, observational, longitudinal study. Main Measures: Combat concussion, blast exposure, and subsequent head injury exposure over the first decade post-deployment. Global disability measured by the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE). Results: Latent class growth analysis identified 4 main trajectories of global outcome, with service members sustaining combat concussion 37 to 49 times more likely to be in the worse disability trajectories than non-blast-controls (blast-TBI: odds ratio [OR] = 49.33; CI, 19.77-123.11; P
Source: The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation - Category: Neurology Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research