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83 Association Between Tele-Neuropsychological Versus In-person Assessment in a Clinical Sample of Veterans with a History of Traumatic Brain Injury
- Elena Polejaeva, Karen Hanson, Amy Jak
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 486-487
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Objective:
During the COVID-19 pandemic, many neuropsychological services shifted from an in-person assessment to a tele-neuropsychological assessment format. Prior research studies support the use of telemedicine assessments but have also noted some limitations (i.e., tasks involving direct manipulation of physical stimuli and visuospatial tasks). We sought to examine the relationship between the same neuropsychological tasks administered via a telemedicine versus inperson format in a treatment seeking clinical sample of Veterans with history of TBI.
Participants and Methods:Veterans with history of mild to severe TBI (predominantly mild TBI) referred to the TBI Cognitive Rehabilitation Clinic within the San Diego Veterans Affairs Medical Center completed a comprehensive neuropsychological assessment to help inform diagnosis and treatment recommendations. 515 Veterans completed traditional in-person assessment (pre-pandemic) and 45 Veterans completed neuropsychological assessment via a telemedicine platform during the pandemic (Veteran was in their home and examiner was in their home or facility office). The total sample consisted of 93% male and 7% female, average age of 33, 13 years of education, 63% White, 13% Other/Non-reported, 12% Black, 6% Asian, 6% Pacific Islander, 2% Alaskan Native, and 1% Multi-Racial, 73% Non-Hispanic, and 27% Hispanic. For the purposes of this study, we used age-corrected subtest scores from the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System (D-KEFS): Color Word Interference (CWI) and Verbal Fluency (VF), WASI-II Matrix Reasoning, California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT-II), Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS-IV): Logical Memory, and WRAT-IV Reading. We also examined symptoms of anxiety (BAI), sleep quality (PSQI), neurological symptoms (NSI), and symptoms of PTSD (PCL-5). ANOVAs were used to analyze the relationship between tele-neuropsychological versus in-person administration. Additionally, we controlled for performance validity failure.
Results:Tele-neuropsychological task results were comparable to in-person assessment across all tasks, except for D-KEFS CWI color naming subtest where individuals completing the task via telemedicine performed approximately 2 scaled scores below the in-person assessment group, F (1, 278)=6.44, p=.012. Individuals who completed the tele-neuropsychological assessment during the COVID-pandemic did not differ on scores of self-reported symptoms of PTSD or neuropsychological symptoms when compared to in-person assessment of pre-pandemic individuals within our clinic. However, the telemedicine group reported better sleep quality (F (1, 377)=11.94, p=.001) but a trend towards more symptoms of anxiety (F (1, 552)=2.90, p=.089.
Conclusions:These results suggest that many of the verbal memory, language, premorbid functioning, and verbal/visual tasks of executive function can be adequately administered via telemedicine. Substantial variability may exist on measures of processing speed administered via telemedicine, however. Additionally, changes in lifestyle and daily demands during the COVID-19 pandemic may have created unique circumstances that benefited sleep quality for some individuals but also increased symptoms of anxiety/uncertainty.
4 Women and Concussion Outcomes: What We Know and How We Can Do Better
- Amy Jak, Veronica Merritt, Michael Thomas, Elena Polejaeva, lEAH Talbert, Cody Witten, Amma Agyemang, Mary Jo Pugh
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 100-101
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Objective:
The vast majority of existing research on outcomes following concussion is androcentric with women notably understudied in all settings where concussion commonly occurs, including sport, military, and civilian domains. Clinical care for concussed women is, by extension, far less evidenced-based as it is largely extrapolated from male-dominated studies. We therefore sought to center concussion outcomes of women in big data sources in this investigation to capitalize on both sample size and breadth of setting in which concussion occurs.
Participants and Methods:We identified all studies with publicly released data as of 4/7/21 that included both male and female adults, enough information to determine severity of injury consistent with concussion/mild traumatic brain injury (TBI), a measure of postconcussive symptoms (PCS), and objective measures of neurocognitive functioning from the Federal Interagency Traumatic Brain Injury Research (FITBIR) Informatics System. FITBIR is a collaborative effort of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Department of Defense (DoD), developed to share data across the entire TBI research community. This resulted in inclusion of six studies with a total of 9370 participants, 32% female. PCS data was drawn from the Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory (NSI), the Rivermead Post-Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire (RPSQ), and the Sport Concussion Assessment Tool - 3rd Edition (SCAT 3), specifically the 22-item participant symptom evaluation rated on a 7-point scale. The questionnaires were harmonized and the following symptom domains emerged: Somatic, Cognitive, and Affective. Data were analyzed using linear mixed-effects models.
Results:We found a small to medium sized significant effect of sex, with women reporting higher symptoms overall. Mean symptom endorsement scores were higher overall on the NSI in comparison to the RPSQ and SCAT (ps < .001). Follow-up analyses revealed sex differences were largest for cognitive symptoms, followed by somatic symptoms, then affective symptoms. We also found significant main effects of population (military>sport/civilian, p = .003) and sex (women>males, p < .001) on the overall composite, as well as a significant population-by-sex interaction such that female service members/veterans endorsed the highest rates of symptoms (p < .001). Similar patterns of significance and effect sizes were observed for the somatic and affective composites. Cognitive symptom composites showed a similar pattern, but with smaller effect sizes overall. Racial and ethnic diversity was also limited in the sample.
Conclusions:In one of the largest samples of women to date, we found a small to medium effect of sex on symptom reporting such that women reported higher levels of postconcussive symptoms than males. Notably, however, the women in military/Veteran samples endorsed the highest levels of symptoms. Despite using a large publicly available dataset to maximize the representation of women, the current sample was still predominantly male and racial and ethnic diversity among the sample was not consistent with expected broader population demographics. Dramatically more concerted efforts need to be made to engage women in all spheres of concussion research (military, civilian, and sport). Strategies to be more inclusive in concussion research will be highlighted.
61 Robustness of Attention Networks Across Multiple Sessions: Behavioral and ERP Findings
- Catherine Tocci, Elena Polejaeva, Andreas Keil, Sarah Long, Jennifer Ly, Alexia Brown, Christopher N Sozda, William M Perlstein
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 469-470
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Objective:
Attention is the backbone of cognitive systems and is requisite for many cognitive processes vital to everyday functioning, including memory, problem solving, and the cognitive control of behavior. Attention is commonly impaired following traumatic brain injury and is a critical focus of rehabilitation efforts. The development of reliable methods to assess rehabilitation-related changes are paramount. The Attention Network Test (ANT) has been used previously to identify 3 independent, yet interactive attention networks—alerting, orienting, and executive control (EC). We examined the behavioral and neurophysiological robustness and temporal stability of these networks across multiple sessions to assess the ANT’s potential utility as an effective measure of change during attention rehabilitative interventions.
Participants and Methods:15 healthy young adults completed 4 sessions of the ANT (1 session/7-day period). ANT networks were assessed within the task by contrasting opposing stimulus conditions: cued vs. non-cued trials probed alerting, valid vs. invalid spatial cues probed orienting, and congruent vs. incongruent targets probed EC. Differences in median correct-trial reaction times (RTs) and error rates (ERs) between the condition pairs were assessed to determine attention network scores; robustness of networks effects, as determined by one-sample t-tests at each session, against a mean of 0, determining the presence of significant network effects at each session. Sixty-four-channel electroencephalography (EEG) data were acquired concurrently and processed using Matlab to create condition-related event-related potentials (ERPs)—particularly the cue- and probe-related P1, N1, and P3 deflection amplitudes, measured by using signed-area calculation in regions of interest (ROIs) determined by observation of spherical-spline voltages. This enabled us to examine the robustness of cue- and probe-attention-network ERPs.
Results:All three attention networks showed robust effects. However, only the EC RT and ER network scores remained significantly robust [t(14)s>13.9,ps<.001] across all sessions, indicating that EC is robust in the face of repeated exposure. Session 1 showed the greatest EC-RT robustness effect which became smaller during the subsequent sessions per ANOVAs on Session x Congruency [F(3,42)=10.21,p<.0001], reflecting persistence despite practice effects. RT robustness of the other networks varied across sessions. Alerting and EC ERs were similarly robust across all 4 sessions, but were more variable for the orienting network. ERP results: The cue-locked P1-orienting (valid vs. invalid) was generally larger to valid- than invalid-cues, but the robustness across sessions was variable (significant in only sessions 1 and 4 [t(14)s>2.13,ps<.04], as reflected in a significant main effect of session [p=.0042]. Next, target-locked EC P3s were generally smaller to congruent than incongruent targets [F(1,14)=9.40,p=.0084], showing robust effects only in sessions 3 and 4 [ps<.005].
Conclusions:The EC network RT and ER scores were consistently robust across all sessions, suggesting that this network may be less vulnerable to practice effects across session than the other networks and may be the most reliable probe of attentional rehabilitation. ERP measures were more variable across attention networks with respect to robustness. Behavioral measures of EC-network may be most reliable for assessing progress related to attentional-rehabilitation efforts.