Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time

One of the consequences of traumatic brain injury is the postconcussion syndrome. The symptoms in this syndrome include headache, dizziness, poor memory, poor concentration, easy fatigue, drowsiness, irritability, sensitivity to light, sensitivity to noise, low alcohol tolerance, visual prob...

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Main Author: Mureriwa, Joachim F. L.
Other Authors: Nell, V.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:Mureriwa, Joachim F. L. (1997) Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17545>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17545
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-uir.unisa.ac.za-10500-175452018-11-19T17:14:39Z Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time Mureriwa, Joachim F. L. Nell, V. 616.8 Post-concussion syndrome Neuropsychology Neuropsychiatry Nervous system -- Diseases Brain -- Concussion Brain -- Wounds and injuries Brain damage One of the consequences of traumatic brain injury is the postconcussion syndrome. The symptoms in this syndrome include headache, dizziness, poor memory, poor concentration, easy fatigue, drowsiness, irritability, sensitivity to light, sensitivity to noise, low alcohol tolerance, visual problems, auditory problems, nausea, vomiting, anxiety, and depression. Several factor analytic studies have shown that these symptoms load onto cognitive and noncognitive factors (Bohnen, Twijnstra, & Jolles, 1992). The aim of this study was to determine whether patients who report different symptoms also evidence differences in cognitive deficits, as indexed by reaction time. For this purpose 106 subjects (mean age 25.92 years; SD=6.05) of both sexes were tested on 8 reaction time tasks adapted from Shum, McFarland, Bain, and Humphreys (1990). There were 54 traumatic brain injury patients (mean age 26.40 years; SD=6.23) drawn from three Pretoria hospitals. They were heterogeneous with respect to diagnosis and severity of injury. For the controls (N=52), the mean age was 25.43 years (SD=5.88). The eight reaction time tasks constituted 4 task variables, each with 21evels. From these tasks, 36 reaction time indexes were derived. The indexes were classified into 4 groups, viz., reaction time (RT), movement time (MT), total reaction time (TT), and subtraction scores (SB, the difference between the 2 levels for each task variable). RT reflects the decision component and MT reflects the response execution component of reaction time. Partial correlation coefficients for all symptoms (p0,01) showed that some symptoms were most frequently associated with RT whilst others were most frequently associated with MT. On factor analysis with varimax rotation, symptoms loaded predominantly with SB scores. Symptoms also loaded with different task variablseuiggesting that they correlated with deficits on different stages of information processing. Taking into account possible methodological constraints that were discussed, these results confirm that different symptoms within the postconcussion syndrome correlate with different cognitive deficits. The correlations between symptoms and indices of reaction time are moderated by the characteristics of the symptoms (frequency & intensity), and the duration since injury. These findings have significance for understanding the aetiology of the postconcussion symptoms and for planning treatment. Psychology Ph. D. (Psychology) 2015-01-23T04:23:56Z 2015-01-23T04:23:56Z 1997-07 Thesis Mureriwa, Joachim F. L. (1997) Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17545> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17545 en 1 online resource (xiii, 301 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic 616.8
Post-concussion syndrome
Neuropsychology
Neuropsychiatry
Nervous system -- Diseases
Brain -- Concussion
Brain -- Wounds and injuries
Brain damage
spellingShingle 616.8
Post-concussion syndrome
Neuropsychology
Neuropsychiatry
Nervous system -- Diseases
Brain -- Concussion
Brain -- Wounds and injuries
Brain damage
Mureriwa, Joachim F. L.
Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time
description One of the consequences of traumatic brain injury is the postconcussion syndrome. The symptoms in this syndrome include headache, dizziness, poor memory, poor concentration, easy fatigue, drowsiness, irritability, sensitivity to light, sensitivity to noise, low alcohol tolerance, visual problems, auditory problems, nausea, vomiting, anxiety, and depression. Several factor analytic studies have shown that these symptoms load onto cognitive and noncognitive factors (Bohnen, Twijnstra, & Jolles, 1992). The aim of this study was to determine whether patients who report different symptoms also evidence differences in cognitive deficits, as indexed by reaction time. For this purpose 106 subjects (mean age 25.92 years; SD=6.05) of both sexes were tested on 8 reaction time tasks adapted from Shum, McFarland, Bain, and Humphreys (1990). There were 54 traumatic brain injury patients (mean age 26.40 years; SD=6.23) drawn from three Pretoria hospitals. They were heterogeneous with respect to diagnosis and severity of injury. For the controls (N=52), the mean age was 25.43 years (SD=5.88). The eight reaction time tasks constituted 4 task variables, each with 21evels. From these tasks, 36 reaction time indexes were derived. The indexes were classified into 4 groups, viz., reaction time (RT), movement time (MT), total reaction time (TT), and subtraction scores (SB, the difference between the 2 levels for each task variable). RT reflects the decision component and MT reflects the response execution component of reaction time. Partial correlation coefficients for all symptoms (p0,01) showed that some symptoms were most frequently associated with RT whilst others were most frequently associated with MT. On factor analysis with varimax rotation, symptoms loaded predominantly with SB scores. Symptoms also loaded with different task variablseuiggesting that they correlated with deficits on different stages of information processing. Taking into account possible methodological constraints that were discussed, these results confirm that different symptoms within the postconcussion syndrome correlate with different cognitive deficits. The correlations between symptoms and indices of reaction time are moderated by the characteristics of the symptoms (frequency & intensity), and the duration since injury. These findings have significance for understanding the aetiology of the postconcussion symptoms and for planning treatment. === Psychology === Ph. D. (Psychology)
author2 Nell, V.
author_facet Nell, V.
Mureriwa, Joachim F. L.
author Mureriwa, Joachim F. L.
author_sort Mureriwa, Joachim F. L.
title Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time
title_short Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time
title_full Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time
title_fullStr Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time
title_full_unstemmed Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time
title_sort traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time
publishDate 2015
url Mureriwa, Joachim F. L. (1997) Traumatic brain injury and attention : postconcussion symptoms and indices of reaction time, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17545>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17545
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