The British Journal of Psychiatry (2005) 186: 423-426
© 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Misdiagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder following severe traumatic brain injury
Ruth E. Sumpter, MA, DClinPsych
Community Treatment Centre for Acquired Brain Injury, Glasgow
Tom M. Mcmillan, MAppSci PhD, FBPsS
Faculty of Medicine, University of Glasgow, Gartnavel Royal Hospital,
Glasgow, UK
Correspondence:
Professor T. M. McMillan, Psychological Medicine, Faculty of Medicine,
University of Glasgow, Gartnavel Royal Hospital, 1055 Great Western Road,
Glasgow G12 0XH, UK. E-mail:
t.m.mcmillan{at}clinmed.gla.ac.uk
Declaration of Interest None.

ABSTRACT
Background The incidence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
after traumatic brain injury is unclear. One issue involves
the validity of
diagnosis using self-report questionnaires.
Aims To compare PTSDcaseness arising from
questionnaire self-report and structured interview.
Method Participants (n=34) with traumatic brain injury were
recruited. Screening measures and self-report questionnaires were
administered, followed by the structured interview.
Results Using questionnaires, 59% fulfilled criteria for PTSD on the
Post-traumatic Diagnostic Scale and 44% on the Impact of Events Scale, whereas
using structured interview (Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale) only 3% were
cases.This discrepancy may arise from confusions between effects
of PTSD and traumatic brain injury.
Conclusions After traumatic brain injury, PTSD self-report measures
might be used for screening but not diagnosis.

INTRODUCTION
There is growing acceptance that post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) can
occur after traumatic brain injury
(
McMillan et al,
2003), but the reported incidence varies widely (056%),
making service planning difficult. Such variability may arise
because of
methodological difficulties (
Bryant,
2001), but
in addition, the effects of traumatic brain injury
might lead
to inaccurate reporting or interpretation of responses. For
example, people with traumatic brain injury can focus on the
memory gap
resulting from coma and post-traumatic amnesia without
great distress and this
might be inappropriately labelled as
intrusive; they may avoid
tasks and situations
because of incapacity rather than fear; and often their
lives
have been significantly altered by traumatic brain injury
(
McMillan, 2001).
Personality
change, including impulsiveness, reduced
insight, rigid thinking, reduced
motivation, and impaired learning
and concentration resulting from traumatic
brain injury, may
also cause some complaints to be mislabelled as PTSD
symptoms.
McMillan (
2001)
reported a severe case of traumatic brain injury
that appeared to have PTSD on
the basis of the Post-traumatic
Diagnostic Scale (PDS), but clearly did not at
clinical interview.
The present study examines McMillans finding in a
group
of severe cases of traumatic brain injury.

METHOD
Permission was obtained from the local research ethics committee.
Participants
A total of 34 participants were recruited from community out-patient and
rehabilitation services, and voluntary organisations. A power calculation
based on proportions of people with severe traumatic brain injury reaching
PTSD caseness on the Impact of Events Scale (IES) and
Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS)
(Turnbull et al,
2001) indicated n=30, needed for 80% power, with
set at 0.05 and ß at 0.2. Participants were >17 years, with a severe
traumatic brain injury (post-traumatic amnesia >1 day) at least 3 months
before interview. Exclusion criteria were scores <27 on the Mini-Mental
State Examination (Folstein et al,
1975), severe dysphasia or dyslexia, or current treatment for
psychosis.
Measures
PTSD
- IES, a 15-item self-report questionnaire, providing ratings of avoidance
and intrusion (Horowitz et al,
1979). Total IES scores >25 determined caseness
(Corneil et al,
1999).
- PDS, a 49-item self-report questionnaire based on the 17 DSMIV
(American Psychiatric Association,
1994) symptoms, with ratings of duration, onset and impact on
social and occupational functioning (Foa
et al, 1997). PTSD caseness is defined here
as fulfilment of criteria BF. For all definitions, criterion A need not
be met in a population with severe traumatic brain injury given the
co-occurrence of loss of consciousness and post-traumatic amnesia.
- CAPS, a structured clinical interview assessing the 17 DSMIV
symptoms, their duration and impact. A symptom is present when
the frequency is >0 and intensity >1
(Blake et al, 1995).
Two definitions of caseness were used to consider difficulties that might
arise if CAPS is administered by an unsupervised and inexperienced
clinician:
- CAPSwithout judgement requires DSMIV criteria BF to be
fulfilled.
- CAPSwith clinical judgement in addition requires the
clinician to adjudge that the symptoms are related to the trauma.
Other
- The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) has two sub-scales
(anxiety and depression); scores >7 were rated abnormal
(Zigmond & Snaith,
1983).
- The Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire (RPQ) is a 14-item
self-report questionnaire (King et
al, 1995).
- The Glasgow Outcome ScaleExtended (GOSE) is a clinician-rated
scale of social and functional disability after traumatic brain injury
(Wilson et al,
1998).
- Post-traumatic amnesia duration estimates severity of traumatic brain
injury and was carried out retrospectively
(McMillan et al,
1996).
- The Mini-Mental State Examination was used to assess ability to consent to
participate (Folstein et al,
1975).
- The Speed of Comprehension Test (SCT) assesses speed and accuracy of
information processing (Baddeley et
al, 1992).
- The National Adult Reading Test (Nelson
& Willison, 1991) estimates premorbid intellectual
ability.
Procedure
Demographic and injury information were obtained at interview. Screening
measures and self-report questionnaires were administered, and then the
clinician-rated GOSE and the structured interview (CAPS).

RESULTS
Demographic and descriptive measures
Thirty male and four female participants were recruited from
community
services. The average age at interview was 40 years
(s.d.=11, range
2060 years) and years of education 12
(s.d.=2, range 1020).
Average premorbid intelligence
quotient (IQ) (National Adult Reading Test
(NART)) was 100
(s.d.=14, range 69121) and time since injury 6 years
(s.d.=7, range 0.634). Average duration of post-traumatic
amnesia was
11 weeks (s.d.=13 weeks, range 26 h to 52 weeks).
Cause of injury was road
traffic accident (16), fall (11),
assault (6) or sports accident (1).
Compensation claims or
legal proceedings were ongoing in 12 cases. GOSE
scores
ranged from lower-severe to upper-moderate disability, with
53% in the
lower-moderate category. RPQ scores ranged from
3 to 60 (mean=30, s.d.=14).
Average SCT scaled scores were
<25th percentile
(
Baddeley et al,
1992), (mean=6, s.d.=2.7,
range 112).
Diagnostic measures (Table 1)
More cases were found on the PDS (McNemars
2=12.07, P<0.01) and IES (McNemars
2=4.27, P<0.05) than on CAPSwithout
clinical judgement. Only one participant (3%) was diagnosed with PTSD using
CAPSwith clinical judgement. Of 20 cases identified by
questionnaires, 19 were false positives, as were 5 out of 6
cases identified using CAPSwithout clinical judgement. No
false negatives were found. Either questionnaire identified more false
positive cases than CAPSwithout clinical judgement
(McNemars
2=4.32, P<0.05).
No significant differences were found between PTSD cases and
non-cases on questionnaire measures (PDS or IES) or
CAPSwithout clinical judgement, for age at interview (PDS or IES,
U=105.5, P<0.78; CAPS, U=58.5,
P<0.25), age at injury (U=101.5, P<0.67;
U=52.0, P<0.15), time since injury (U=112,
P<0.63; U=68, P<0.47), years of education
(U=105, P<0.63; U=83.5, P<0.98),
duration of post-traumatic amnesia (U=100.5, P<0.64;
U=55, P<0.19), or premorbid IQ (U=104.5,
P<0.76; U=80, P<0.88). No significant
differences were found between those pursuing litigation and those not, in
terms of PDS symptom severity score (U=123, P<0.76), IES
total score (U=99.5, P<0.24), or CAPS total score
(U=117.5, P<0.60).
RPQ scores significantly correlated with CAPS total score (r=0.67,
P<0.01) and PDS symptom severity score (r=0.32,
P<0.07). Scores on the HADS depression sub-scale significantly
correlated with IES total score (r=0.34, P<0.05), PDS
severity score (r=0.68, P<0.01) and CAPS total score
(r=0.73, P<0.01). Scores on the HADS anxiety sub-scale
significantly correlated with PDS severity score (r=0.43,
P<0.01) and CAPS total score (r=0.49, P<0.01)
but not with IES total score (r=0.31, P<0.08).
Questionnaire scores did not significantly correlate with total scores on the
SCT (PDS r=0.14, P<0.4; IES r=0.15,
P<0.39) or the error number on the SCT (PDS r=0.28,
P<0.40; IES r=0.07, P<0.83).

DISCUSSION
People with severe traumatic brain injury met PTSD criteria
for
caseness more often using self-report questionnaires
than
structured interview. Significantly more (false positive)
cases
were identified using questionnaires, even
compared with interview without
clinical judgement guiding
the relevance of responses to trauma.
Cases were
not identified at interview that were not also
identified by
questionnaire, supporting the use of questionnaires as screening
tools, perhaps tentatively given that only one participant
was diagnosed with
PTSD at interview with clinical judgement.
This incidence of 3% is lower than
reported (1727%)
in studies on severe traumatic brain injury
(
Bryant et al, 2000;
Hibbard et al, 1998).
Participants often self-rated
symptoms as present on questionnaires, but
denied symptom presence
at interview, or reported other reasons for symptom
presentation,
as found previously
(
McMillan, 2001). The overlap
between
traumatic brain injury and PTSD symptoms may lead to some errors
in
questionnaire responding (despite written instructions)
that become clear at
interview. Slowed speed of information
processing and errors in comprehending
written material were
observed, but were not associated with higher
questionnaire
scores; nor was premorbid intellect, severity of brain injury
nor ongoing litigation. Other changes in personality and cognition
that can
result from traumatic brain injury were not considered
(e.g. impulsivity,
reduced insight, rigid thinking, memory
impairment) but might influence
symptom reporting (
Williams et
al, 2002). PDS and CAPS scores correlated with anxiety and
depression scores on the HADS, perhaps again because of symptom
overlap.
However, as this effect was found for questionnaires
and interview, it does
not explain the discrepancy in caseness
frequency arising
between these measures. There was anecdotal
evidence that participants
reported symptoms not related to
psychological trauma. For example, curiosity
(without associated
distress) about the memory gap after traumatic brain
injury
being inappropriately labelled as intrusive and
psychological and social impacts of traumatic brain injury
being considered in
response to prompts about avoidance
and
hyperarousal symptoms. Clinical judgement
allowed consideration
of differential diagnosis, context and
confounding factors, and not simply
symptom number and frequency.
This is obviously relevant in the clinical
situation, independently
of whether criteria for caseness are
reached.
The current study is limited because the sample was not consecutive,
although demographics were in line with a recent prospective traumatic brain
injury cohort (Thornhill et al,
2000). Future research should include interview methodology in
studies on PTSD after severe traumatic brain injury, and further investigate
differential diagnoses and confounding factors in order to standardise
assessment with this population. Although self-report measures can be used for
screening, they can mislead if used for diagnosis of PTSD after traumatic
brain injury.

Clinical Implications and Limitations
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
- Structured interview is necessary for diagnosis of PTSD after severe
traumatic brain injury.
- Questionnaire self-report can be useful to screen for PTSD symptoms after
traumatic brain injury.
- The true incidence of PTSD after severe brain injury has yet to be
determined.
LIMITATIONS
- Findings may not extend to minor brain injury.
- Understanding of how people with traumatic brain injury make errors on
questionnaires may be improved by qualitative data.
- Although similar demographically to cohort studies, the sample was not
recruited consecutively.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was completed as part fulfilment of a doctorate in
clinical
psychology at the University of Glasgow.

REFERENCES
- American Psychiatric Association (1994)
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(4th edn) (DSMIV).Washington, DC: APA.
- Baddeley, A., Emslie, H. & Smith, I. (1992)
The Speed and Capacity of Language-Processing Test.
Bury St Edmunds:Thames Valley Test Company Limited.
- Blake, D. D., Weathers, F.W., Nagy, L. M. et al
(1995) The development of a clinician-administered PTSD
scale. Journal of Traumatic Stress,
8, 75
90.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Bryant, R. A. (2001) Posttraumatic stress
disorder and mild brain injury: Controversies, causes and consequences.
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology,
23, 718
728.[Medline]
- Bryant, R. A., Marosszeky, J. E., Crooks, J. & Gurka, J.
(2000) Posttraumatic stress disorder after severe traumatic
brain injury. American Journal of Psychiatry,
157, 629
631.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Corneil, W., Beaton, R., Murphy, S., et al
(1999) Exposure to traumatic incidents and prevalence of
post-traumatic stress symptomatology in urban firefighters in two countries.
Journal of Occupational Health Psychology,
4, 131
141.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Foa, E. B., Cashman, L., Jaycox, L., et al
(1997) The validation of a self-report measure of post
traumatic stress disorder: the Post-traumatic Diagnostic Scale (PDS).
Psychological Assessment,
9, 445
451.[CrossRef]
- Folstein, M.F., Folstein, S.E. & McHugh, P.R.
(1975) Mini-Mental State: a practical method
for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician.
Journal of Psychiatric Research,
12, 189
198.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Hibbard, M. R., Uysal, S., Kepler, K. et al
(1998) Axis I psychopathology in individuals with traumatic
brain injury. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation,
13, 24
39.[Medline]
- Horowitz, M., Wilner, N. & Alvarez, W.
(1979) Impact of Event Scale: A measure of subjective
distress. Psychosomatic Medicine,
41, 209
218.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- King, N. S., Crawford, S., Wenden, F. J. et al
(1995) The Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire:
a measure of symptoms commonly experienced after head injury and its
reliability. Journal of Neurology,
252, 587
592.
- McMillan, T. M. (2001) Errors in diagnosing
post-traumatic stress disorder after traumatic brain injury. Brain
Injury, 15, 39
46.[CrossRef][Medline]
- McMillan, T. M., Jongen, E. L. & Greenwood, R. J.
(1996) Assessment of post-traumatic amnesia after severe
closed head injury: retrospective or prospective? Journal of
Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry,
60, 422
427.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- McMillan, T. M., Williams, W. H. & Bryant, R.
(2003) Post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain
injury: a review of causal mechanisms, assessment, and treatment.
Neuropsychological Rehabilitation,
13, 149
164.[CrossRef]
- Nelson, H. E., Willison, J. (1991)
National Adult Reading Test, (2nd edn), Test Manual.
Windsor: NFER-Nelson.
- Thornhill, S., Teasdale, G. M., Murray, G. D. et al
(2000) Disability in young people and adults one year after
head injury: prospective cohort study. BMJ
320, 1631
1635.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Turnbull, S. J., Campbell, E. A. & Swann, I. J.
(2001) Post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms following a
head injury: Does amnesia for the event influence the development of symptoms?
Brain Injury, 15, 775
785.[Medline]
- Williams, W. H., Evans, J. J., Needham, P. et al,
(2002) Neurological, cognitive and attributional predictors
of posttraumatic stress symptoms after traumatic brain injury.
Journal of Traumatic Stress,
15, 397
400.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Wilson, J. T. L., Pettigrew, L. E. L. & Teasdale, G. T.
(1998) Structured interviews for the Glasgow outcome scale
and the extended Glasgow outcome scale: guidelines for their use.
Journal of Neurotrauma,
15, 573
585.[Medline]
- Zigmond, A. S. & Snaith, R. P. (1983) The
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Acta Psychiatrica
Scandinavica, 67, 361
370.[Medline]
Received for publication February 9, 2004.
Revision received September 14, 2004.
Accepted for publication September 30, 2004.
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
E. Kim, E. C. Lauterbach, A. Reeve, D. B. Arciniegas, K. L. Coburn, M. F. Mendez, T. A. Rummans, and E. C. Coffey
Neuropsychiatric Complications of Traumatic Brain Injury: A Critical Review of the Literature (A Report by the ANPA Committee on Research)
J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci,
May 1, 2007;
19(2):
106 - 127.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|