Insufficient Sleep Following Pediatric Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Correlates With Neurocognitive Dysfunction

被引:3
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作者
Hull, Bailey
Karabon, Patrick
Alpiner, Neal
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10.1212/WNL.0000000000013046
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R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
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摘要
Objective Analyze the impact of sleep disturbance on neurocognitive function in children recovering from mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Background Sleep disturbance of any nature is reported in more than half of all mTBI patients. The pathophysiology of sleep disturbance following mTBI is associated with structural and functional disruptions of sleep circuitry and circadian rhythm. Specifically in the pediatric population, untreated sleep disturbance has been shown to delay mTBI recovery and compound other morbidities including neurocognitive dysfunction. Design/Methods A retrospective chart review of 118 pediatric patients (mean age = 14.56 2.03 years) recovering from mTBI was performed. Epworth Sleepiness Scale (SF-8) results were analyzed in relation to CNS Vital Signs (CNSVS) neurocognitive test outcomes. SF-8 is a subjective estimation of a patient's daytime sleepiness. CNSVS uses a multitude of domains to objectively evaluate the overall neurocognitive status of a patient. Pearson correlations were calculated using a type I error of p < 0.05 between variables. Results Epworth Sleepiness Scale (SF-8) results showed 28.82% of participants experienced excessive daytime sleepiness sufficient enough to recommend medical attention. Upon further analysis, there was a significant negative correlation between SF-8 and CNSVS neurocognitive test outcomes including complex attention (r = -0.37; p = 0.0004), cognitive flexibility (r = -0.24; p = 0.0151), executive function (r = -0.21; p = 0.0350), and simple attention (r = -0.36; p = 0.0003) scores. This means as SF-8 scores increased (participants defined as excessively sleepy), neurocognitive function scores in these domains decreased. There was not enough evidence to conclude a significant correlation between other CNSVS domains and SF-8 (all p > 0.05). Conclusions Our findings support the concern of neurocognitive dysfunction among pediatric mTBI patients with sleep disturbance. Further analysis is needed to determine if mTBI is the primary source or an exacerbating factor of sleep disturbance within this population. Nonetheless, these findings suggest a need for thorough evaluation when treating sleep concerns, irrespective of a history of childhood mTBI.
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页数:1
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