Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/102506
Title: Evolution of cognitive impairment after traumatic brain injury: is there improvement after controlling the practice effect? [supplementary material]
Other Titles: Evolución de las alteraciones cognitivas tras un traumatismo craneoencefálico: ¿hay mejoría tras controlar el efecto de la práctica? [material suplementario]
Author: Lubrini, Genny
Viejo-Sobera, Raquel  
Periañez Morales, José Antonio
Cicuendez, Marta
Castaño, Ana M.
González Marqués, Javier
Lagares, Alfonso
Rios-Lago, Marcos  
Others: Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC)
Citation: Lubrini, G., Viejo-Sobera, R., Periáñez, J.A., Cicuendez, M., Castaño, A.M., González-Marqués, J., Lagares, A. & Ríos-Lago, M. (2020). Evolución de las alteraciones cognitivas tras un traumatismo craneoencefálico: ¿hay mejoría tras controlar el efecto de la práctica?. Revista de Neurología, 70(2), 37-44. doi: 10.33588/rn.7002.2019233
Abstract: The importance of knowing the pattern of evolution of cognitive deficits in the first months after a traumatic brain injury (TBI) has encouraged the development of numerous longitudinal studies. However, the results of most of them should be taken with caution due to the lack of adequate control of practice effects that can lead to overestimating the genuine recovery of cognitive processes. To describe the cognitive changes between the acute and subacute phases of the TBI controlling the effect of practice. Patients and methods. Twenty-two patients were assessed in two different time points after TBI (immediately and after six months) using the following tests: Trail Making Test (A, B, B/A, B-A), Stroop Test (W, C, CW, interference), Digit Symbol-Coding, Symbol Search, Digits Forward and Backward, Verbal Fluency and Short-term Memory. To control for the practice effects, a transformation of the scores was performed applying the procedure proposed by Calamia et al. Before controlling the practice effects, the scores of all tests improved (p > 0.001). However, afterward, the improvement remained only in the Trail Making Test-B, B/A and B-A, Digit Symbol-Coding, Symbol Search, Stroop CW and Digits Backward. The lack of control of practice effects in longitudinal studies can generate misleading interpretations about the evolution of cognitive defi cits. The pattern of recovery after a TBI varies depending on the cognitive process.
Keywords: cognitive performance
longitudinal design
evolution
practice
recuperation
memory
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/other
Publication license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/  
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