Cognitive-communication skills and acute outcome following mild traumatic brain injury

Brain Inj. 2020 Sep 18;34(11):1472-1479. doi: 10.1080/02699052.2020.1802669. Epub 2020 Aug 28.

Abstract

Purpose: Little is known about cognitive-communication skills post mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). We aimed to determine how performance on cognitive-communication measures in the acute recovery period relates to early outcome following complicated mTBI.

Method: Results of language and communication skill measures, demographic and accident-related data, length of stay (LOS), Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended (GOSE) scores and discharge destinations were retrospectively gathered for 128 admitted patients with complicated mTBI.

Results: More than half of the individuals required rehabilitation services post discharge from hospital with over a third needing in-patient rehabilitation. Patients with poorer skills in auditory comprehension, verbal reasoning, confrontation naming, verbal fluency and conversational discourse were more likely to require in-patient rehabilitation. Subjects with worse skills in naming, conversational discourse and letter-category verbal fluency had a greater chance of being referred to out-patient rehabilitation services. Thus patients with both auditory comprehension and oral expression deficits were more likely to require in-patient services whereas those who had oral expression deficits but no significant difficulty in auditory comprehension were more often referred to out-patient services. Also, worse conversational discourse skills and semantic-category naming ability were related to lower GOSE scores and the chance of a longer LOS was greater when letter-category naming was poorer.

Conclusion: The likelihood of individuals requiring rehabilitation services post mTBI was related to performance on several oral expression and auditory comprehension measures. It is therefore important to evaluate cognitive-communication skills early to determine rehabilitation needs.

Keywords: Traumatic brain injury; acute care; communication; language; outcome.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aftercare
  • Brain Concussion*
  • Brain Injuries*
  • Communication*
  • Humans
  • Patient Discharge
  • Retrospective Studies