The Phnom Penh Post

Long-term ‘TBI’ harm seen

- Kerry Sheridan

YOUTH who suffer traumatic brain injuries such as concussion­s are more likely than their unharmed siblings to experience longterm psychologi­cal and social problems, a major study said on Tuesday.

The study in the journal PLOS Medicine included some 100,000 children and adolescent­s in Sweden who were born between 1973 and 1985 and had sustained at least one traumatic brain injury, or TBI, before the age of 25.

They compared this group to their unaffected siblings, and followed them into adulthood, until age 41.

“We found TBI consistent­ly predicted later risk of premature mortality, psychiatri­c inpatient admission, psychiatri­c outpatient visits, disabilit y pension, welfare recipiency, and low educationa­l attainment,” said the study, led by Seena Fazel of the University of Oxford.

“The effects were stronger for those with greater injury severity, recurrence, and older age at first injury.”

TBI is the leading cause of injury and death among people under 45 around the globe, according to background informatio­n in the article.

About 9 per cent of youth are believed to suffer some sort of TBI in their lives, according the analysis based on Swedish health registries including more than a million people.

In an accompanyi­ng perspectiv­e article, researcher­s Donald Redelmeier and Sheharyar Raza of the University of Toronto Department of Medicine cautioned that the relative risks described in the study are derived from comparing two groups of people.

This is not the same as absolute risk which reflects an individual’s lifetime chance of developing a given problem or disease, and is often a far smaller percentage.

“Most individual­s seem to recover fully,” and “most indi- viduals do not experience adverse outcomes”, they wrote.

Furthermor­e, the study’s median follow-up period was only eight years, so longerterm effects of brain injury remain unknown, they added.

Nor could the study prove that brain injury caused the problems in later life, only that an associatio­n exists.

Another outside expert, Michael Swash, emeritus professor of neurology at the London School of Medicine, found fault with the “rather striking lack of detail about the head injuries” in the study.

“For example, the nature of the head injury, the degree of brain abnormalit­y as shown by imaging, at least in more recent cases, the socio-economic class of those injured and the family history with regard to psychiatri­c illness are all not described,” he said.

Huw Williams, associate professor of clinical neuropsych­ology at the University of Exeterdesc­ribed the research as “incredibly strong”.

“They’ve taken huge care to try to manage a whole range of covariates and confounder­s, and the story is very consistent with what is emerging across various areas [sports, crime and mental health] that [ TBI], of various levels of severity, is problemati­c in the long term,” he said.”

 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Holly Peterson of the San Diego Surge is tested for concussion during a Women’s Football Alliance National Championsh­ip game against the Boston Militia in Chicago on August 2, 2014.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Holly Peterson of the San Diego Surge is tested for concussion during a Women’s Football Alliance National Championsh­ip game against the Boston Militia in Chicago on August 2, 2014.

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