Loading…

Recovery from the Post-concussional Syndrome: A Preliminary Study Comparing Young and Middle-aged Adults

For most people the post-concussional syndrome (PCS) is time contingent, and typically resolves within three months of the trauma. A subgroup of people, however, are at risk for protracted sequelae. One risk factor is old age. This study tests the hypothesis that middle-aged (rather than old) people...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Neuropsychological rehabilitation 1998-10, Vol.8 (4), p.413-431
Main Author: Wolfe, Jenni A. Ogden Melissa
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:For most people the post-concussional syndrome (PCS) is time contingent, and typically resolves within three months of the trauma. A subgroup of people, however, are at risk for protracted sequelae. One risk factor is old age. This study tests the hypothesis that middle-aged (rather than old) people take longer to recover to premorbid levels on neuropsychological tests and subjective complaints of PCS symptoms following a mild head injury than young adults. Two groups of nine participants aged from 16 to 26 years (Young group) and 40 to 56 years (Middle-aged group) who had suffered a PCS at least four months previously were compared with two age-matched control groups, and a student control group. A two-way between subjects ANOVA on the raw test scores demonstrated that independently of head injury, middle-aged participants did more poorly than young participants on tests of memory, and head-injured participants (independently of age), did more poorly than non-head-injured participants on tests of reaction time and psychomotor speed. The only age x head-injury interactions approaching significance (P < .05) were on a verbal memory test (Logical Memory) and the Trail-Making Test, Part B. Contrary to expectations, both interactions demonstrated a trend towards head injury affecting the performance of the young participants more than the middle-aged participants. Possible explanations include the positive influence of higher IQs on recovery after head injury (middle-aged participants had a slightly higher estimated premorbid IQ than young participants), or alternatively young headinjured adults may be less likely than middle-aged people to take heed of advice to rest and return to work gradually in order to recover from a PCS.
ISSN:0960-2011
1464-0694
DOI:10.1080/713755583