Traumatic brain injury: neuropathological, neurocognitive and neurobehavioral sequelae

被引:243
|
作者
Pavlovic, Dragan [1 ]
Pekic, Sandra [2 ,3 ]
Stojanovic, Marko [2 ,3 ]
Popovic, Vera [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Belgrade, Fac Special Educ & Rehabil, Visokog Stevana 2, Belgrade 11000, Serbia
[2] Clin Ctr Serbia, Clin Endocrinol Diabet & Metab Dis, Dept Neuroendocrinol, Dr Subotica 13, Belgrade, Serbia
[3] Univ Belgrade, Fac Med, Dr Subotica 8, Belgrade 11000, Serbia
关键词
Traumatic brain injury; Mild TBI; Neuropathology; Cognitive deficits; Behavioral dysfunction; GROWTH-HORMONE REPLACEMENT; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; GH DEFICIENCY; HEAD-INJURY; POTENTIAL MECHANISMS; COGNITIVE FUNCTION; PROGNOSTIC VALUE; CONCUSSION; EPIDEMIOLOGY; THERAPY;
D O I
10.1007/s11102-019-00957-9
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) causes substantial neurological disabilities and mental distress. Annual TBI incidence is in magnitude of millions, making it a global health challenge. Categorization of TBI into severe, moderate and mild by scores on the Glasgow coma scale (GCS) is based on clinical grounds and standard brain imaging (CT). Recent research focusedon repeated mild TBI (sport and non-sport concussions) suggests that a considerable number of patients have long-term disabling neurocognitive and neurobehavioral sequelae. These relate to subtle neuronal injury (diffuse axonal injury) visible only by using advanced neuroimaging distinguishing microstructural tissue damage. With advanced MRI protocols better characterization of TBI is achievable. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) visualizes white matter pathology, susceptibility weight imaging (SWI) detects microscopic bleeding while functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) provides closer understanding of cognitive disorders etc. However, advanced imaging is still not integrated in the clinical care of patients with TBI. Patients with chronic TBI may experience many somatic disorders, cognitive disturbances and mental complaints. The underlying pathophysiological mechanisms occurring in TBI are complex, brain injuries are highly heterogeneous and include neuroendocrine dysfunctions. Post-traumatic neuroendocrine dysfunctions received attention since the year 2000. Occurrence of TBI-related hypopituitarism does not correlate to severity of the GCS scores. Complete or partial hypopituitarism (isolated growth hormone (GH) deficiency as most frequent) may occur after mild TBI equally as after moderate-to-severe TBI. Many symptoms of hypopituitarism overlap with symptoms occurring in patients with chronic TBI, i.e. they have lower scores on neuropsychological examinations (cognitive disability) and have more symptoms of mental distress (depression and fatigue). The great challenges for the endocrinologist are: (1) detection of hypopituitarism in patients with TBI prospectively (in the acute phase and months to years after TBI), (2) assessment of the extent of cognitive impairment at baseline, and (3) monitoring of treatment effects (alteration of cognitive functioning and mental distress with hormone replacement therapy). Only few studies recently suggest that with growth hormone (rhGH) replacement in patients with chronic TBI and with abnormal GH secretion, cognitive performance may not change while symptoms related to depression and fatigue improve. Stagnation in post-TBI rehabilitation progress is recommended as a signal for clinical suspicion of neuroendocrine dysfunction. This remains a challenging area for more research.
引用
收藏
页码:270 / 282
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] NEUROBEHAVIORAL OUTCOME OF CHILDRENS MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
    PARKER, RS
    SEMINARS IN NEUROLOGY, 1994, 14 (01) : 67 - 73
  • [42] Neurobehavioral effects of levetiracetam in patients with traumatic brain injury
    Benge, Jared F.
    Phenis, Richard A.
    Bernett, Abigail
    Cruz-Laureano, Daniel
    Kirmani, Batool F.
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, 2013, 4
  • [43] LONGITUDINAL CHARACTERIZATION OF NEUROBEHAVIORAL AND NEUROPATHOLOGICAL OUTCOMES IN YOUNG HTAU TRANSGENIC MICE AFTER SINGLE OR REPETITIVE MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
    Ojo, Joseph O.
    Mouzon, Benoit
    Ferro, Austin
    Crynen, Gogce
    Bachmeier, Corbin
    Stewart, William
    Mullan, Michael
    Crawford, Fiona
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2013, 30 (15) : A84 - A84
  • [44] Animal model of repeated low-level blast traumatic brain injury displays acute and chronic neurobehavioral and neuropathological changes
    Ravula, Arun Reddy
    Rodriguez, Jose
    Younger, Daniel
    Perumal, Venkatesan
    Shao, Ningning
    Rao, Kakulavarapu V. Rama
    Pfister, Bryan
    Chandra, Namas
    EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 2022, 349
  • [45] pharmacotherapy of the cognitive sequelae secondary to traumatic brain injury
    Rios-Romenets, S.
    Castano-Monsalve, B.
    Bernabeu-Guitart, M.
    REVISTA DE NEUROLOGIA, 2007, 45 (09) : 563 - 570
  • [46] Medication in the treatment of the behavioural sequelae of traumatic brain injury
    Bates, Gordon
    DEVELOPMENTAL MEDICINE AND CHILD NEUROLOGY, 2006, 48 (08): : 697 - 701
  • [47] Controversies in the sequelae of pediatric mild traumatic brain injury
    Lee, Lois K.
    PEDIATRIC EMERGENCY CARE, 2007, 23 (08) : 580 - 583
  • [48] Sleep disruption and the sequelae associated with traumatic brain injury
    Lucke-Wold, Brandon P.
    Smith, Kelly E.
    Linda Nguyen
    Turner, Ryan C.
    Logsdon, Aric F.
    Jackson, Garrett J.
    Huber, Jason D.
    Rosen, Charles L.
    Miller, Diane B.
    NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS, 2015, 55 : 68 - 77
  • [49] Traumatic brain injury: Mechanisms, manifestations, and visual sequelae
    Rauchman, Steve H.
    Zubair, Aarij
    Jacob, Benna
    Rauchman, Danielle
    Pinkhasov, Aaron
    Placantonakis, Dimitris G.
    Reiss, Allison B.
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2023, 17
  • [50] NEUROCHEMICAL SEQUELAE OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY - THERAPEUTIC IMPLICATIONS
    MCINTOSH, TK
    CEREBROVASCULAR AND BRAIN METABOLISM REVIEWS, 1994, 6 (02) : 109 - 162