Authors

  1. Bailie, Jason M. PhD
  2. Kennedy, Jan E. PhD
  3. French, Louis M. PsyD
  4. Marshall, Kathryn MS, MPH, PA-C
  5. Prokhorenko, Olga MD
  6. Asmussen, Sarah PhD
  7. Reid, Matthew W. PhD
  8. Qashu, Felicia PhD
  9. Brickell, Tracey A. DPsych
  10. Lange, Rael T. PhD

Abstract

Objective: To explore the taxonomy of combat-related mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) based on symptom patterns.

 

Participants: Up to 1341 military personnel who experienced a combat-related mTBI within 2 years of evaluation.

 

Measures: Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory and PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version (PCL-C).

 

Results: Cluster analysis revealed the following 4 subtypes: primarily psychiatric (posttraumatic stress disorder) group, a cognitive group, a mixed symptom group, and a good recovery group. The posttraumatic stress disorder cluster (21.9% of the sample) reported symptoms related to hyperarousal and dissociation/depression with few complaints related to cognition or headaches. The cognitive group (21.5% of the sample) had primarily cognitive and headache complaints with few mood symptoms. The mixed profile cluster included 18.6% of the sample and was characterized by a combination of mood complaints (hyperarousal and dissociation/depression), cognitive complaints, and headaches. The largest cluster (37.8% of the sample) had an overall low symptom profile and was labeled the "good recovery" group.

 

Conclusions: The results support a unique taxonomy for combat-related mTBI. The clinical differences among these subtypes indicate a need for unique treatment resources and programs.