Back to Search Start Over

Practice Patterns in Pharmacological and Non-Pharmacological Therapies for Children with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A Survey of 15 Canadian and United States Centers

Authors :
Tara Rhine
Isabelle Gagnon
Angela Lumba-Brown
Michael J. Bell
Andrew R. Mayer
Kelly Russell
Michael J. Ellis
Kathryn J Schneider
Quynh Doan
Mohamed K. Badawy
Jocelyn Gravel
William Craig
Rebekah Mannix
Grace Park
Christina L. Master
S. R. Wisniewski
Keith Owen Yeates
Steven Bin
Stephen B. Freedman
Daniel J. Corwin
Darcy Beer
John J. Leddy
Miriam H. Beauchamp
Michelle D. Penque
Brett Burstein
Shireen M. Atabaki
Roger Zemek
Kristy B. Arbogast
Source :
Journal of neurotrauma. 36(20)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Given the lack of evidence regarding effective pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions for pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and the resultant lack of treatment recommendations reflected in consensus guidelines, variation in the management of pediatric mTBI is to be expected. We therefore surveyed practitioners across 15 centers in the United States and Canada who care for children with pediatric mTBI to evaluate common-practice variation in the management of pediatric mTBI. The survey, developed by a panel of pediatric mTBI experts, consisted of a 10-item survey instrument regarding providers' perception of common pediatric mTBI symptoms and mTBI interventions. Surveys were distributed electronically to a convenience sample of local experts at each center. Frequencies and percentages (with confidence intervals [CI]) were determined for survey responses. One hundred and seven respondents (71% response rate) included specialists in pediatric Emergency Medicine, Sports Medicine, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Neuropsychology, Neuropsychiatry, Physical and Occupational Therapy, Physiatry/Rehabilitation, and General Pediatrics. Respondents rated headache as the most prevalently reported symptom after pediatric mTBI, followed by cognitive problems, dizziness, and irritability. Of the 65 (61%; [95% CI: 51,70]) respondents able to prescribe medications, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications (55%; [95% CI: 42,68]) and acetaminophen (59%; [95% CI: 46,71]) were most commonly recommended. One in five respondents reported prescribing amitriptyline for headache management after pediatric mTBI, whereas topiramate (8%; [95% CI: 3,17]) was less commonly reported. For cognitive problems, methylphenidate (11%; [95% CI: 4,21]) was used more commonly than amantadine (2%; [95% CI: 0,8]). The most common non-pharmacological interventions were rest ("always" or "often" recommended by 83% [95% CI: 63,92] of the 107 respondents), exercise (59%; [95%CI: 49,69]), vestibular therapy (42% [95%CI: 33,53]) and cervical spine exercises (29% [95%CI: 21,39]). Self-reported utilization for common pediatric mTBI interventions varied widely across our Canadian and United States consortium. Future effectiveness studies for pediatric mTBI are urgently needed to advance the evidence-based care.

Details

ISSN :
15579042
Volume :
36
Issue :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurotrauma
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f5dc507356dbd7165eaaf5f79676082