EDITORIAL |
Community Head Injury Service, The Camborne Centre, Jansel Square, Bedgrove, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire HP27 7ET, UK
No head injury is too trivial to ignore (Hippocrates, 460377 BC, in Ingebrigsten (1998))
Post-concussion syndrome has presented clinicians with controversy and intrigue for at least 130 years. Its symptoms, which often follow uncomplicated mild head injury (post-traumatic amnesia <1h, Glasgow Coma Scale score 1315, loss of consciousness <15 min) and moderate head injury (post-traumatic amnesia 124 h, Glasgow Coma Scale score 912, loss of consciousness 15 min to 6 h), commonly include headache, dizziness, fatigue, poor memory, poor concentration, irritability, depression, sleep disturbance, frustration, restlessness, sensitivity to noise, blurred vision, double vision, photophobia, nausea and tinnitus (King, 1997). Debate and argument have always plagued this syndrome, but research over the past decade or so has helped to clarify some of the areas of dispute and some interventions have been developed and evaluated. What follows is an attempt to illuminate the syndrome in the light of these developments.
EPIDEMIOLOGY AND NATURAL RECOVERY
The number of people who sustain a mild head injury and experience subsequent post-concussion symptoms is very high. In Great Britain each year, 250300 hospital admissions per 100 000 of the population involve head injury, of which only 8% are severe injuries and at least 75% are mild (Jennett & MacMillan, 1981). The number of mild head injuries that pass through accident and emergency departments without admission is 48 times this number. Many, if not the majority of those with mild head injury experience no discernible symptoms whatsoever, but at least half experience some post-concussion symptoms. Most recover completely within 3 months of injury, but around a third have some persisting symptoms beyond this time. Around 8% have significant symptoms at 1 year and in some cases these symptoms are possibly permanent (Binder, 1997). Quite clearly, mild head injury is not always a mild experience.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL IMPAIRMENT
A consistent feature of post-concussion syndrome is the correlation between the severity of symptoms and the severity of neuropsychological impairments in speed of information processing. These impairments tend to improve in line with symptomatic recovery over 3 months following injury, and where symptoms do persist at 6 months these cognitive deficits also tend to remain (Bohnen et al, 1992). Verbal and visuospatial short-term and long-term impairments are also a consistent feature of the syndrome, and these, too, typically recover over 3 months following injury. These impairments do not, however, correlate well with the severity of symptomatic presentation. Measures of other cognitive domains (e.g. reaction time) have so far yielded only equivocal results.
EVIDENCE FOR ORGANIC FEATURES
The extent to which the syndrome is primarily of organic or psychological origin, at any given time following injury, is a debate that is often heated, and sometimes polemical. Evidence of organic and quasi-organic processes involved in at least some presentations of post-concussion syndrome includes the following:
Other evidence suggestive of organic factors includes the following: slower recovery with increased age (cut-off at around 40 years) (Binder, 1986); poorer outcome and a cumulative effect of previous and successive mild head injuries (Gronwall & Wrightson, 1975); and poorer outcome with a history of alcohol or substance misuse (Lishman, 1988).
EVIDENCE FOR INVOLVEMENT OF PSYCHOLOGICAL PROCESSSES
Evidence for psychological features includes the following:
TREATMENT AND INTERVENTION
Papers describing post-concussion syndrome and its assessment vastly outweigh those investigating intervention and treatment. The majority of reported interventions are primarily psychological and have the central aim of minimising the vicious circle of stress and post-concussion symptoms becoming mutually exacerbating, through education, support and reassurance (King et al, 1997). Treatment typically involves:
There is good evidence from randomised controlled trials that early intervention within the first few weeks of mild head injury does significantly reduce post-concussion symptoms and limit the emergence of persisting problems (Wade et al, 1998). A single hour-long assessment and treatment session is usually sufficient to achieve this effect, and there is some evidence that education plus reassurance has a superior outcome to education alone (Alves et al, 1993). There is, however, no reliable evidence base for guiding the management of post-concussion syndrome when it persists, and there are virtually no systematic follow-ups of mild head injury and post-concussion beyond 1 year after injury. These areas need to be the focus of future research.
CONCLUSIONS
Mild organic dysfunction is not uncommon in the early days following mild head injury and during the subsequent few months. During this time psychological features can develop and/or pre-existing psychological vulnerabilities may be activated. The effectiveness of brief, early psychological intervention may predominantly stem from minimising the impact of unhelpful beliefs and behaviours surrounding the syndrome.
When post-concussion syndrome persists, psychological features will entirely account for the symptoms in some individuals, and organic or quasi-organic features will entirely account for the symptoms in others. Because the vast majority of patients with uncomplicated mild head injury will not receive extensive investigations it may be prematurely inferred that organic processes are not present, and therefore psychological processes must be the only, or predominant, cause of the syndrome. Conversely, in those without clear and conclusive evidence of psychopathological disorder it may be prematurely inferred that organic or quasi-organic processes are responsible. The vast majority of presentations of post-concussion syndrome, however, are unlikely to be at these extremes. Similar symptoms, but with different aetiological processes, will present in different cases and possibly within a single individual at different times following injury. It is quite possible that, at different times after injury, different windows of vulnerability emerge which increase the role of psychological factors, for example when the patient begins to doubt the possibility of recovery or when issues surrounding compensation claims predominate (Table 1). In any given case the relative contribution of these processes will have to be gauged from both positive and negative evidence of organic and psychological features. This has to be done without losing sight of the complex interactional effects between these factors. It is therefore essential that patients with persisting and disabling post-concussion symptoms receive individualised formulations of their particular problems.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1 Windows of vulnerability in post-concussion syndrome |
REFERENCES
This article has been cited by other articles:
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E. A Allen Interventions for postconcussion syndrome Trauma, July 1, 2007; 9(3): 181 - 187. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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R. Whittaker, S. Kemp, and A. House Illness perceptions and outcome in mild head injury: a longitudinal study J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry, June 1, 2007; 78(6): 644 - 646. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Carr Postconcussion syndrome: a review Trauma, January 1, 2007; 9(1): 21 - 27. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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S E Wall, W H Williams, S Cartwright-Hatton, T P Kelly, J Murray, M Murray, A Owen, and M Turner Neuropsychological dysfunction following repeat concussions in jockeys J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry, April 1, 2006; 77(4): 518 - 520. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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