Menopause and Traumatic Brain Injury: A NIDILRR Collaborative Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems Study

被引:0
|
作者
Rapport, Lisa J. [1 ]
Kalpakjian, Claire Z.
Sander, Angelle M.
Lequerica, Anthony H. [2 ]
Bushnik, Tamara
Quint, Elisabeth H.
Hanks, Robin A.
机构
[1] Wayne State Univ, Dept Psychol, 5057 Woodward Ave, Detroit, MI 48202 USA
[2] Kessler Fdn, E Hanover, NJ USA
来源
关键词
Menopause; Rehabilitation; Symptom assessment; Traumatic brain injury; ITEM BANKS; TBI; OUTCOMES; FATIGUE;
D O I
10.1016/j.apmr.2024.07.021
中图分类号
R49 [康复医学];
学科分类号
100215 ;
摘要
Objective: To examine the experience of menopause symptoms in women with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Design: Cross-sectional descriptive study. Setting: Five sites of the TBI Model Systems (TBIMS) program. Participants: Participants were 210 women, aged 40-60 years, who were not taking systemic hormones and did not have both ovaries removed: 61 participants were enrolled in the TBIMS, who were at least 2 years post-TBI and living in the community. One hundred forty-nine participants without TBI were recruited from a research registry and the metropolitan Detroit community. Interventions: Not applicable. Main Outcome Measures: A checklist comprised of 21 menopause symptoms assessing 4 symptom clusters (vasomotor, somatic, psychological, and cognitive). Results: TBI and non-TBI groups did not significantly differ and showed small effect sizes on vasomotor symptoms. On the remaining symptom clusters, women with TBI showed greater presence and severity of symptoms than women without TBI, as well as fewer differences between premenopausal and postmenopausal women on those symptoms. A profile indicating an additive or potentiating effect of TBI on menopause symptoms was not observed. Conclusions: Findings support a conceptual model of menopause and TBI indicating that symptoms most closely associated with estrogen decline are similar for women with and without TBI, whereas symptoms that overlap with common TBI sequelae are generally more frequent and severe among these women. Likely because of lower baseline of symptoms premenopause, postmenopausal women without TBI reported more numerous and severe symptoms relative to their premenopausal counterparts without TBI. Overall, it may be that women without TBI experience menopause as more of a "change" of life, whereas women with TBI chronically face significantly more of these symptoms than women without TBI. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2024;105:2253-61 (c) 2024 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:2253 / 2261
页数:9
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