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Advanced Neurology                                                       Cognition in children with mild TBI








                 Result (s)  -Higher rates   of inattentive/  hyperactive   symptoms,   particularly if   hospitalized (3-fold   increase in the   likelihood of a   substance abuse   diagnosis)  -Mood disorder   diagnoses  -Possible risk of   anxiety immediately   after mTBI. However,   it was not necessarily   a long-term outcome  -Adolescents with   mTBI were more   likely to exhibit   disruptive behaviors,   including>1 ADHD  -A study proposed   that mTBI is   associat






                    Family




                    Psychiatric  Attention   problems,   depression   and mood   disorders,   anxiety,   oppositional   defiant   disorder/  disruptive   behaviors, and   PTSD



                 Outcome measure (s)  Psychosocial                                               - K-SADS-PL  - TOMM  -   Child PTSD   Symptoms   Scale









                    Cognitive                                                                    -   Sorting, design   fluency, and   trail-making tasks   (D-KEFS)  -   Digit and spatial   spans (WISC-IV)  - CPT II–V




                      neurologic and   neuroradiologic


                    PCS/                                                                         - PCS-I

                 Evaluation   time points   after TBI   -                                        3 months




                    Mean age   (range)/  (years)  9.34                                           11.9 (6 – 18)



                 Population  Males  -                                                            38



                          3182 (30
                    N       studies)                                                             61

             Table 1. (Continued)  Control  Author/year/  group  country/  design  HC,   Emery    OI, and  et al. 45 /2016/US   minor  and Canada/  traumas  Systematic   review  PTSD  Segev    et al. 37 /2018/  Israel/  Prospective   cross-sectional   cohort











            Volume 3 Issue 4 (2024)                         9                                doi: 10.36922/an.3886
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