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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
201

Access to Neurosurgical Care for Traumatic Brain Injury in Ontario

Sharma, Sunjay 17 July 2013 (has links)
Introduction: Trauma centers (TC) are the only institutions with resources to manage patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). We chose to examine potential barriers to access to TC care for TBI patients. Methods: Administrative datasets were used to evaluate access to TC among patients with severe TBI. We examined triage practices of EMS in TBI. Finally, we analyzed surveys to capture the beliefs, perceptions and knowledge of ED physicians with respect to TBI. Results: 57% of patients in Ontario had any access to a TC following TBI. Of patients who had potential access to a TC from the scene of injury as defined by pre-hospital triage guidelines, 60% of patients were undertriaged. Challenges that ED physicians faced with managing TBI, included lack of beds at TC and difficulty attaining transport resources. Conclusion: Access to TC care for patients with TBI is impeded by patient and system level factors.
202

Using Tele-rehabilitation to Address Executive Dysfunction and to Promote Community Integration after Traumatic Brain Injury: A Pilot Study

Ng, Edith Man Wai 24 August 2011 (has links)
Executive dysfunction can affect community integration in adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI). The Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP) approach has shown some promise in promoting functional improvements in adults with executive dysfunctions post TBI. However, access to rehabilitation is often limited especially in rural communities. This study aimed to (1) investigate the feasibility of administering the CO-OP approach in a tele-rehabilitation format and (2) examine its impact on community integration and executive dysfunction. A pilot series of 3 case studies was conducted. Participants identified 5 goals; 3 were trained and 2 were untrained to allow examination of transfer. Outcome measures included the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure, the Mayo-Portland Adaptability Inventory-4 Participation Index, and the Dysexecutive Questionnaire. Descriptive analyses demonstrated goal achievement and transfer, suggesting it is feasible to implement the CO-OP approach in a tele-rehabilitation format. Community integration and executive dysfunction behaviours also showed trends towards improvement.
203

Relationships between Changes in Coping Strategies and Community Integration Status at 6 and 12 Months after Traumatic Brain Injury

Li, Erxun 20 November 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this prospective cohort study was to determine the relationships between changes in coping strategies and community integration at 6 and 12 months post traumatic brain injury (TBI). Seventy-one participants were adult significant others (SOs) (family members/friends) of people with TBI. SOs, proxies for TBI patients, completed coping and community integration questionnaire to describe TBI patients’pre-injury status immediately post-injury as baseline information. Followed-up interviewed were completed at 6 and 12 months. Results showed that increased emotional preoccupation coping from baseline to 6 months were significantly associated with decreased productive activities and decreased social integration at 6 months and 12 months and modestly associated with decreased home integration at 12 months. Multivariable regressions showed that changes in emotional preoccupation coping from baseline to 6 months contributed significantly to social integration and productive activities above and beyond demographic factors and injury severity. Implications for cognitive rehabilitation are discussed.
204

Using Tele-rehabilitation to Address Executive Dysfunction and to Promote Community Integration after Traumatic Brain Injury: A Pilot Study

Ng, Edith Man Wai 24 August 2011 (has links)
Executive dysfunction can affect community integration in adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI). The Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP) approach has shown some promise in promoting functional improvements in adults with executive dysfunctions post TBI. However, access to rehabilitation is often limited especially in rural communities. This study aimed to (1) investigate the feasibility of administering the CO-OP approach in a tele-rehabilitation format and (2) examine its impact on community integration and executive dysfunction. A pilot series of 3 case studies was conducted. Participants identified 5 goals; 3 were trained and 2 were untrained to allow examination of transfer. Outcome measures included the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure, the Mayo-Portland Adaptability Inventory-4 Participation Index, and the Dysexecutive Questionnaire. Descriptive analyses demonstrated goal achievement and transfer, suggesting it is feasible to implement the CO-OP approach in a tele-rehabilitation format. Community integration and executive dysfunction behaviours also showed trends towards improvement.
205

Relationships between Changes in Coping Strategies and Community Integration Status at 6 and 12 Months after Traumatic Brain Injury

Li, Erxun 20 November 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this prospective cohort study was to determine the relationships between changes in coping strategies and community integration at 6 and 12 months post traumatic brain injury (TBI). Seventy-one participants were adult significant others (SOs) (family members/friends) of people with TBI. SOs, proxies for TBI patients, completed coping and community integration questionnaire to describe TBI patients’pre-injury status immediately post-injury as baseline information. Followed-up interviewed were completed at 6 and 12 months. Results showed that increased emotional preoccupation coping from baseline to 6 months were significantly associated with decreased productive activities and decreased social integration at 6 months and 12 months and modestly associated with decreased home integration at 12 months. Multivariable regressions showed that changes in emotional preoccupation coping from baseline to 6 months contributed significantly to social integration and productive activities above and beyond demographic factors and injury severity. Implications for cognitive rehabilitation are discussed.
206

The Investigation of Long-term Cognitive Changes after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury using Novel and Sensitive Measures

Ozen, Lana January 2012 (has links)
Memory and concentration problems are frequently reported long after experiencing a mild traumatic brain injury (mild TBI), though conflict with null findings of deficits on standard neuropsychological tests. Experimental research shows that these inconsistencies are, in part, due to the simplicity of neuropsychological tests. As well, past research suggests that when neuropsychological deficits are occasionally detected within this population, they could be influenced by diagnosis threat: an expectation bias for impaired performance when individuals are merely informed that cognitive problems may be experienced following a mild TBI. The main goal of this thesis was to specify the long-term cognitive effects of mild TBI, with the prediction that, while cognitive complaints may be over-reported due to diagnosis threat, significant deficits can be detected using sensitive measures in experimental paradigms. Experiment 1 sought to document whether diagnosis threat influenced self-report of everyday attention and memory problems and neuropsychological task performance in individuals with a remote history of mild TBI. We found that undergraduate students with a mild TBI were significantly more likely to report having attention and memory failures in their daily lives when exposed to diagnosis threat, compared to undergraduate students not exposed to diagnosis threat. These findings call into question the efficacy of using of self-report measures to identify long-term cognitive deficits following a mild TBI. In an attempt to further specify persistent significant cognitive deficits, we designed two different experimental paradigms that uniquely manipulated the demand place on executive processes, as past research suggested deficits emerge only when tasks require considerable cognitive resources. In Experiment 2a, we manipulated processing load on a visual working memory task, across two conditions, while also limiting the potential effect of diagnosis threat. While self-report and neuropsychological measures of attention and memory did not differentiate the groups, the mild TBI group took significantly longer to accurately detect repeated targets on our working memory task. Accuracy was comparable in the low-load condition and, unexpectedly, mild TBI performance surpassed that of controls in the high-load condition. Temporal analysis of target identification suggested a strategy difference between groups: mild TBI participants made a significantly greater number of accurate responses following the target’s offset, and significantly fewer erroneous distracter responses prior to target onset, compared to controls. In Experiment 2b we also examined whether manipulating executive processing demands would differentiate mild TBI from controls, this time on a routine action task that required participants to learn a sequence of hand movements to targets. While not significant, we found a trend such that mild TBI participants were slower to respond on trials with a large executive demand compared controls, while no differences were found on trials with relatively low executive requirements. Results from Experiments 2a and 2b provide stronger evidence for mild TBI-related slowing during a working memory task with an executive component compared to a skilled action task that also had an executive component, but placed minimal demand on memory. To more precisely identify the brain basis of this cognitive slowing, in Experiment 3 we administered a visual n-back task in which we systematically increased working memory demands from 0- to 3-item loads. We found that, compared to controls, mild TBI participants showed a reduction in P300 amplitude, conceptualized as an index of available cognitive resources for stimulus classification. While no late stage response differences were found between groups, P300 amplitude was negatively correlated with response times at higher loads in both control and mild TBI participants. Findings suggest that high functioning young adults who sustained a mild TBI in their remote past, have a reduced amount, or inefficient recruitment of, cognitive resources for target detection; a potential mechanism underlying mild TBI-related response slowing on tasks that place a heavy demand on processing resources. Similar to the effects of mild TBI, aging is also known to negatively impact cognition. In Experiment 4, we examined whether TBI-related deficits persist into older adulthood, and compound the negative effect of aging on cognition. We administered the same working memory task as in Experiment 2a, along with a variety of neuropsychological tests in order to investigate the effect of a TBI sustained an average of 50 years in the past. While no group differences emerged on our experimental working memory task, older adults with a history of 1 or 2 TBIs performed significantly worse than non head-injured older adults only on neuropsychological measures of attention that had an executive component. Such results suggest that a remote TBI sustained early in life further compounds normal age-related cognitive decline. Together, these experiments help specify the measures that best detect long lasting cognitive changes following TBI. Particularly, our findings provide a potential explanation for why long-term cognitive deficits are difficult to identify in the young mild TBI population: the majority of neuropsychological tests are insensitive to minor changes in information processing speed and, as a result, the execution of slowing strategies to maintain accuracy may go undetected. Our findings also demonstrate the importance of investigating longer-term effects of TBI, as they may be chronic and impact cognitive task performance in old age, amplifying normal age-related cognitive deficits.
207

Development and Validation of a Music-based Attention Assessment for Patients with Traumatic Brain Injury

Jeong, Eunju 09 December 2011 (has links)
Impairments in attention are commonly seen in individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI). While attention assessment measurements have been developed rigorously and utilized frequently in cognitive neurorehabilitation, there is a paucity of auditory attention assessment instruments that are ecologically valid and that assess different subtypes of attention. Yet, deficits in auditory attention can severely limit everyday functioning, negatively impact work and personal relationships and compromise personal safety. The purpose of this study was to develop and to investigate the psychometric properties of a Music-based Attention Assessment (MAA) instrument. The MAA is a multiple choice, melodic contour identification test, designed to assess three different types of auditory attention, including sustained attention, selective attention, and divided attention. The MAA was piloted with patients with TBI (n = 15) and healthy adults (n = 30) separately to evaluate preliminary psychometric properties. Both pilot studies reported that the MAA possessed a very high reliability and appropriate item properties. However, the MAA was revised due to a ceiling effect on mean test scores in the healthy adult group. The revised version of the MAA was administered to healthy adults (n = 165) as well as TBI patients (n= 22) to investigate construct validity, item properties, test reliability, and difference in MAA performance between groups. Here, psychometric validation of the revised version of the MAA is described, and the obtained results reported. Exploratory factor analysis identified five-factor constructs, supporting the different types of attention that underlie the test items of the revised version of the MAA. The factors identified were Sustained-Short, Sustained-Med to Long, Selective-Noise, Selective & Divided, and Divided-Long. After item elimination, the finalized 45-item MAA in relation to the identified five-factor constructs provided evidence of high internal consistencies as computed by split-half reliability coefficients (r = .836) and Cronbach’s alpha (α = .940), indicating homogeneity of test items within each of the five subtest as well as for the total test. As predicted, significant differences were found between the healthy adult and TBI patient samples across the exploratively obtained five-factor constructs of the revised version of the MAA. The MAA performance was significantly better in the healthy adult group than in the TBI patient group, except on the Sustained Attention–Short Subtest, indicating pervasive attention impairments in patients with TBI. The finding also suggests that a basic level of sustained attention to deal with a small amount of auditory information during a limited time might be intact for the patients with TBI who have a moderate to severe level of brain injury. The aggregate findings suggest that the MAA is a valid and reliable measure that provides diagnostic information in regards to the three types of auditory attention deficits frequently observed in patients with TBI. The use of melodic contours in attention assessment is discussed along with limitations of the study and suggestions for future research. The MAA, when used in conjunction with attention assessment instruments in different sensory modalities, would provide a greater level of precision in the attention assessment of patients with TBI, resulting in more symptom specific and individualized rehabilitation and treatment.
208

Speed of retrieval after traumatic brain injury

Crawford, Maria Anne, n/a January 2005 (has links)
Although it is well established that persons with traumatic brain injury (TBI) experience word retrieval difficulties, the underlying cause of these deficits is not known. Difficulties with word retrieval have negative social implications as they can impact on the ability to converse with others. The overarching goal of this dissertation was to determine the underlying cause of problems with word retrieval after TBI. To test word retrieval in this dissertation, participants were given a series of word fluency tasks and the speed of word generation was measured. In addition to measuring interresponse times, procedures used by Rohrer, Wixted, Salmon and Butters (1995) were also followed. This involved the calculation of parameter estimates to investigate whether slowed retrieval or degraded semantic stores were responsible for the patients� word retrieval difficulties. One parameter (N) was a measure of the total number of retrievable words and the second parameter (tau) was an estimate of mean latency. Study 1 was designed to trial the procedure and equipment adopted throughout this dissertation to analyse speech. University students were presented with categories on a computer screen and asked to generate as many exemplars as possible in 60 seconds. A PowerLab Chart sound system was used to measure the time that each word was generated. The results of Study 1 showed that the methodology of previous research could be replicated using the PowerLab Chart sound system. In Study 2, persons with postconcussion syndrome (PCS) and matched controls were given two word fluency tasks. Results showed that on both tasks patients recalled fewer words, had longer pauses between words, and took significantly longer to generate their first word than controls. Also, patients had a significantly reduced N relative to controls, but there was no difference in tau between patients and controls. Given that the participants had not finished responding and that parameter estimates require responses to be exhausted, Study 3 was designed to replicate the findings of Study 2 using an extended recall period. In Study 3, patients with PCS and matched controls completed a series of word fluency tasks and were given extended periods of time to generate words. Results showed that the patients obtained significantly fewer words on two of the tasks, but no evidence of slowed retrieval was found. There was also no difference in the estimates of N and tau between patients and controls. As the patients in Study 3 sustained more minor injuries than those in Study 2, Study 4 tested patients with severe TBI. In Study 4, patients with severe TBI and matched controls were given a series of word fluency tasks. Results showed that the patients generated fewer words and experienced slowed retrieval. Again, there was no difference in the estimates of N and tau between patients and controls. The results of Study 4 confirmed the hypothesis that slowed word retrieval is a consequence of TBI. Taken together, the results of this dissertation show that an underlying slowness of processing is the primary cause of problems with word retrieval in persons with TBI.
209

Occupational performance and information processing in adults with agitation following traumatic brain injury

Nott, Melissa Therese January 2009 (has links)
Doctor of Philosphy (PhD) / Agitation following traumatic brain injury (TBI) is characterised by a heightened state of activity with disorganised information processing that interferes with learning and achieving functional goals. This thesis outlines a series of studies across four research phases, investigating how occupational performance of adults with TBI is affected by agitated behaviour and information processing difficulties. Clinicians report the presence of agitation interferes with engagement in therapy and achievement of rehabilitation goals. Research Phase One used a retrospective chart review of 80 adults with severe TBI to identify a high incidence of agitated behaviour during inpatient TBI rehabilitation. Agitated behaviour was associated with lengthier rehabilitation admission, prolonged duration of post-traumatic amnesia (PTA), and poor cognitive functioning at discharge. The association between agitation and poor cognition persisted for at least two years after discharge, highlighting the significant impact of agitated behaviour on people’s ability to relearn cognitive skills for daily function. These initial research findings directed subsequent research phases, in which an information processing model was adopted to examine application of cognitive strategies during occupational performance. An emerging occupational therapy assessment, The Perceive, Recall, Plan and Perform (PRPP) System of Task Analysis, was selected as the primary method for evaluating how application of cognitive strategies during occupational performance is affected in agitated patients. Clinical utility of this measure was established in a case study of an adult demonstrating severely agitated behaviour during inpatient TBI rehabilitation, followed by examination of instrument reliability and validity with ten experienced occupational therapists and five adults with agitated behaviour following brain injury. The PRPP System of Task Analysis emerged as a valid and reliable method for determining strategy application deficits during occupational performance of adults with agitated behaviour, in acute stages of TBI rehabilitation. Consistent patterns of processing deficits were related to the Perceive and Recall Quadrants of the PRPP System. The assessment tool forms part of a dynamic, interactive assessment and intervention system. The PRPP System of Intervention was evaluated in the final research phase, using an experimental single case design with replication across eight adults. The effectiveness of PRPP Intervention was examined in comparison to conventional occupational therapy in an ABAB design. Efficacy of the PRPP Intervention was demonstrated, with patients applying significantly more information processing strategies to occupational performance tasks during PRPP Intervention than during conventional occupational therapy sessions. Agitated behaviour concurrently reduced over the period of the study. Relationships between information processing and agitated behaviour are hypothesised.
210

Occupational performance and information processing in adults with agitation following traumatic brain injury

Nott, Melissa Therese January 2009 (has links)
Doctor of Philosphy (PhD) / Agitation following traumatic brain injury (TBI) is characterised by a heightened state of activity with disorganised information processing that interferes with learning and achieving functional goals. This thesis outlines a series of studies across four research phases, investigating how occupational performance of adults with TBI is affected by agitated behaviour and information processing difficulties. Clinicians report the presence of agitation interferes with engagement in therapy and achievement of rehabilitation goals. Research Phase One used a retrospective chart review of 80 adults with severe TBI to identify a high incidence of agitated behaviour during inpatient TBI rehabilitation. Agitated behaviour was associated with lengthier rehabilitation admission, prolonged duration of post-traumatic amnesia (PTA), and poor cognitive functioning at discharge. The association between agitation and poor cognition persisted for at least two years after discharge, highlighting the significant impact of agitated behaviour on people’s ability to relearn cognitive skills for daily function. These initial research findings directed subsequent research phases, in which an information processing model was adopted to examine application of cognitive strategies during occupational performance. An emerging occupational therapy assessment, The Perceive, Recall, Plan and Perform (PRPP) System of Task Analysis, was selected as the primary method for evaluating how application of cognitive strategies during occupational performance is affected in agitated patients. Clinical utility of this measure was established in a case study of an adult demonstrating severely agitated behaviour during inpatient TBI rehabilitation, followed by examination of instrument reliability and validity with ten experienced occupational therapists and five adults with agitated behaviour following brain injury. The PRPP System of Task Analysis emerged as a valid and reliable method for determining strategy application deficits during occupational performance of adults with agitated behaviour, in acute stages of TBI rehabilitation. Consistent patterns of processing deficits were related to the Perceive and Recall Quadrants of the PRPP System. The assessment tool forms part of a dynamic, interactive assessment and intervention system. The PRPP System of Intervention was evaluated in the final research phase, using an experimental single case design with replication across eight adults. The effectiveness of PRPP Intervention was examined in comparison to conventional occupational therapy in an ABAB design. Efficacy of the PRPP Intervention was demonstrated, with patients applying significantly more information processing strategies to occupational performance tasks during PRPP Intervention than during conventional occupational therapy sessions. Agitated behaviour concurrently reduced over the period of the study. Relationships between information processing and agitated behaviour are hypothesised.

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