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Neurocognition after motor vehicle collision and adverse post-traumatic neuropsychiatric sequelae within 8 weeks: Initial findings from the AURORA study

Authors :
Leon D. Sanchez
Irving Hwang
Meghan E. McGrath
Sophia Sheikh
Robert M. Domeier
Sarah D. Linnstaedt
David A. Peak
Nancy A. Sampson
James M. Elliott
Claire Pearson
Sue Lee
Jose L. Pascual
Niels K. Rathlev
Paul I. Musey
Francesca L. Beaudoin
Luke Scheuer
Christopher W. Jones
Stacey L. House
Lauren A. Rutter
Gari D. Clifford
Steven E. Bruce
Diego A. Pizzagalli
Scott L. Rauch
Karesten C. Koenen
Jutta Joormann
Thomas C. Neylan
Laura Germine
Donglin Zeng
Christopher Lewandowski
Ronald C. Kessler
Tanja Jovanovic
Steven E. Harte
Jennifer S. Stevens
Kerry J. Ressler
Brittney E. Punches
Xinming An
Eliza Passell
Kamran Mohiuddin
Paolo Martini
Samuel A. McLean
M Deanna
Phyllis L. Hendry
Robert H. Pietrzak
Alan B. Storrow
Source :
Journal of affective disorders. 298
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background : Previous work has indicated that differences in neurocognitive functioning may predict the development of adverse post-traumatic neuropsychiatric sequelae (APNS). Such differences may be vulnerability factors or simply correlates of APNS-related symptoms. Longitudinal studies that measure neurocognitive functioning at the time of trauma are needed to determine whether such differences precede the development of APNS. Methods : Here, we present findings from a subsample of 666 ambulatory patients from the AURORA (A dvancing U nderstanding of R ec O very afteR traum A ) study. All patients presented to EDs after a motor vehicle collision (MVC). We examined associations of neurocognitive test performance shortly after MVC with peritraumatic symptoms in the ED and APNS (depression, post-traumatic stress, post-concussive symptoms, and pain) 2 weeks and 8 weeks later. Neurocognitive tests assessed processing speed, attention, verbal reasoning, memory, and social perception. Results : Distress in the ED was associated with poorer processing speed and short-term memory. Poorer short-term memory was also associated with depression at 2 weeks post-MVC, even after controlling for peritraumatic distress. Finally, higher vocabulary scores were associated with pain 2 weeks post-MVC. Limitations : Self-selection biases among those who present to the ED and enroll in the study limit generalizability. Also, it is not clear whether observed neurocognitive differences predate MVC exposure or arise in the immediate aftermath of MVC exposure. Conclusions : Our results suggest that processing speed and short-term memory may be useful predictors of trauma-related characteristics and the development of some APNS, making such measures clinically-relevant for identifying at-risk individuals.

Details

ISSN :
15732517
Volume :
298
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of affective disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....de4739b21986c66259d8c0eb02dd95e2