What are the disruptive symptoms of behavioral disorders after traumatic brain injury? A systematic review leading to recommendations for good practices

Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine
Angélique StéfanSOFMER group

Abstract

Behavioral disorders are major sequelae of severe traumatic brain injury. Before considering care management of these disorders, and in the absence of a precise definition for TBI-related behavioral disorder, it is essential to refine, according to the data from the literature, incidence, prevalence, predictive factors of commonly admitted disruptive symptoms. Systematic review of the literature targeting epidemiological data related to behavioral disorders after traumatic brain injury in order to elaborate good practice recommendations according to the methodology established by the French High Authority for Health. Two hundred and ninety-nine articles were identified. The responsibility of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the onset of behavioral disorders is unequivocal. Globally, behavioral disorders are twice more frequent after TBI than orthopedic trauma without TBI (Masson et al., 1996). These disorders are classified into disruptive primary behaviors by excess (agitation 11-70%, aggression 25-39%, irritability 29-71%, alcohol abuse 7-26% drug abuse 2-20%), disruptive primary behaviors by default (apathy 20-71%), affective disorders - anxiety - psychosis (depression 12-76%, anxiety 0.8-24,5%, posttraumatic stress 11-18%, o...Continue Reading

References

Apr 1, 1992·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·M M BrookeK J Bashak
Aug 1, 1991·Psychiatry Research·R S MarinS Firinciogullari
Jan 1, 1991·The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences·T W DunlopJ H Mather
Jan 1, 1986·The American Journal of Psychiatry·S C YudofskyD Williams
Oct 1, 1995·The American Journal of Psychiatry·J R FannP C Esselman
Apr 1, 1994·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·T GalskiJ E Walker
Apr 1, 1993·Journal of Affective Disorders·R E JorgeF Geisler
Jun 1, 1996·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·M E Sandel, W J Mysiw
Jan 9, 1998·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·R Gomez-HernandezR G Robinson
Mar 4, 1998·Brain Injury : [BI]·R KantA Pivovarnik
Jul 3, 1998·The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation·M R HibbardJ Silver
Sep 2, 1998·Brain Injury : [BI]·R KantD Zeiler
Oct 20, 1998·Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology·C McClearyN Namerow
Oct 26, 1999·The British Journal of Psychiatry : the Journal of Mental Science·S DebC Koutzoukis
Aug 24, 2000·The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences·R van ReekumJ Wong
Feb 28, 2001·The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease·R A BryantJ A Gurka
Mar 7, 2001·The American Journal of Psychiatry·D MalaspinaM C Blehar
Aug 29, 2001·American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation·J A BognerD Clinchot
Sep 19, 2001·Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry·T W Teasdale, A W Engberg
Apr 17, 2002·Schizophrenia Research·A S NielsenH Ewald
Aug 3, 2002·The American Journal of Psychiatry·Salla KoponenOlli Tenovuo
Mar 8, 2003·Archives of General Psychiatry·Philip AbdelMalikAnne S Bassett
May 2, 2003·The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences·Amane TatenoRobert G Robinson
Jan 7, 2004·Archives of General Psychiatry·Ricardo E JorgeStephan Arndt
Dec 24, 2004·The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences·Samir Al-AdawiAla'Aldin Al-Hussaini
Feb 19, 2005·Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry·A S David, M Prince
Oct 7, 2005·The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease·Grahame Simpson, Robyn Tate
Nov 24, 2005·The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation·Clea C EvansStuart A Yablon
Nov 24, 2005·The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation·Richard E KennedyNathan D Zasler
Feb 4, 2006·The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation·Ian J BaguleyKim Felmingham
May 4, 2006·The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry : Official Journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry·Mark J RapoportAnthony Feinstein
May 25, 2006·Neuropsychology·Carlo Ziino, Jennie Ponsford
Nov 23, 2006·Journal of Neurotrauma·Wen-Ta ChiuMau-Roung Lin
Nov 25, 2006·Brain Injury : [BI]·Melissa T NottIan J Baguley

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Mar 7, 2017·Frontiers in Pharmacology·Lesley D Schurman, Aron H Lichtman
Apr 12, 2017·Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology·Lucien RochatMartial Van der Linden
Jan 15, 2018·Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry·Helle StangelandVaughan Bell
Nov 3, 2017·The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation·Inder D Kalra, Thomas K Watanabe
Sep 14, 2017·JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports·Fiona J ClayMalcolm Hopwood
Dec 1, 2018·The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation·Tiphaine BourseauMickaël Dinomais
Apr 23, 2020·Frontiers in Neurology·Marlies L TimmerJoukje van der Naalt
Feb 23, 2020·NeuroRehabilitation·Pritesh Parbhoo
Nov 24, 2020·The Mental Health Clinician·Sophie Robert
Mar 3, 2021·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·Christine MelilloGail Powell-Cope
May 23, 2020·The Psychiatric Clinics of North America·Vassilis E Koliatsos, Vani Rao
Apr 23, 2021·Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology : the Official Journal of the National Academy of Neuropsychologists·Tehila Eilam-StockLeigh E Charvet
May 13, 2021·Brain Communications·Michael J C BrayRobin E A Green
Jul 3, 2021·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Birgitta Johansson
Dec 22, 2021·Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology : the Official Journal of the National Academy of Neuropsychologists·Dolores Villalobos, Umberto Bivona

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Brain Injury & Trauma

brain injury after impact to the head is due to both immediate mechanical effects and delayed responses of neural tissues.

Alcohol Use Disorder

Alcohol use disorder involves a pattern of alcohol consumption that includes compulsive use and a loss of control over intake of alcohol. The impact on physical health, socioeconomic factors, and psychiatric health is profound. Find the latest research on alcohol use disorder here.

Anxiety Disorders

Discover the latest research on anxiety disorders including agoraphobia, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder here.

Antipsychotic Drugs

Antipsychotic drugs are a class of medication primarily used to manage psychosis (including delusions, hallucinations, paranoia or disordered thought), principally in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Discover the latest research on antipsychotic drugs here