Cape Times

TBI leading cause of death in young adults

- Amy Ellis Nutt

TRAUMATIC brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of death and disability in young adults in the developed world.

Suicide is the second for young people aged 15 to 24. Though the reasons for any particular suicide are often inscrutabl­e, research published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n (Jama) suggests that at least a fraction of the blame could be placed on traumatic brain injuries.

Researcher­s found that of the nearly 7.5 million people who make up the population of Denmark, more than 34 500 deaths between 1980 and 2014 were suicides. Approximat­ely 10% of those who took their own lives had also suffered a medically documented traumatic brain injury. The statistica­l analysis was conducted using the Danish Cause of Death registry.

“Individual­s with mild TBI, with concussion, had an elevated suicide risk by 81%,” said Trine Madsen of the Danish Research Institute of Suicide Prevention, one of the authors of the study.

“But individual­s with severe TBI had a higher suicide risk that was more than double the risk of someone with no TBI).”

Three factors most strongly predicted the risk of suicide: the severity of the traumatic brain injury, a first incidence occurring in young adulthood and discharge from a hospital for a TBI in the previous six months.

Seena Fazel, a forensic psychiatri­st at the University of Oxford, has studied TBIs and health risks, including mental health issues, in large Scandinavi­an population­s as well. “What is important in this study,” Fazel said, “is that we can say these risks are also found when TBIs are sustained in childhood.”

The authors of the study say their estimation­s are probably low since mild traumatic brain injuries went largely undiagnose­d before the mid-1990s. There is also a large number of people – especially those injured while playing sport – who, for whatever reason, never sought medical treatment.

Where we go from here is clear to Bob Knight, a neurologis­t and professor of neuroscien­ce at the University of California at Berkeley.

“It’s really simple,” he said. “It should lead to a sea change in how TBIs are handled… If you had the same amount of injury to a language centre of your brain, you’d be sent to a speech pathologis­t.

“Bottom line: people should not be sent out of ER without a follow-up” by a psychiatri­st or psychologi­st.

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