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      Auditory and Cognitive Behavioral Performance Deficits and Symptom Reporting in Postconcussion Syndrome Following Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          This study examined auditory deficits and symptom reporting in individuals with long-term postconcussion symptoms following a single mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) compared to age- and gender-matched controls without a history of mTBI.

          Method

          Case history interviews, symptom questionnaires, and a battery of central auditory and neuropsychological tests were administered to 2 groups. The mTBI group was a civilian population recruited from a local concussion management program who were seeking rehabilitation for postconcussion-related problems in a postacute period between 3 and 18 months following injury. Symptom validity testing was included to assess the rate of possible insufficient test effort and its influence on scores for all outcome measures. Analyses of group differences in test scores were performed both with and without the participants who showed insufficient test effort. Rates of symptom reporting, correlations among symptoms and behavioral test outcomes, and the relationships between auditory and cognitive test performance were analyzed.

          Results

          The mTBI group reported a high rate of auditory symptoms and general postconcussion symptoms. Performance on neuropsychological tests of cognitive function showed some differences in raw scores between groups, but when effort was considered, there were no significant differences in the rate of abnormal performance between groups. In contrast, there were significant differences in both raw scores and the rate of abnormal performance between groups for some auditory tests when only considering participants with sufficient effort. Auditory symptoms were strongly correlated with other general postconcussion symptoms.

          Conclusions

          Significant auditory symptoms and evidence of long-term central auditory dysfunction were found in a subset of individuals who had chronic postconcussion symptoms after a single mTBI unrelated to blast trauma. The rate of abnormal performance on auditory behavioral tests exceeded the rate of abnormal performance on tests of cognitive function.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Speech Lang Hear Res
          J. Speech Lang. Hear. Res
          JSLHR
          Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research : JSLHR
          American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
          1092-4388
          1558-9102
          July 2019
          01 July 2019
          1 January 2020
          : 62
          : 7
          : 2501-2518
          Affiliations
          [a ]Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Syracuse University, NY
          [b ]Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY
          Author notes

          Disclosure: The authors have declared that no competing interests existed at the time of publication.

          Correspondence to Kathy R. Vander Werff: kvander@ 123456syr.edu

          Editor-in-Chief: Frederick (Erick) Gallun

          Editor: Steve Aiken

          Article
          PMC6808357 PMC6808357 6808357 23814764000300140072
          10.1044/2019_JSLHR-H-18-0281
          6808357
          31260387
          65fcf897-f03e-43c5-a052-da9983fb84b8
          Copyright © 2019 American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
          History
          : 13 July 2018
          : 13 December 2018
          : 15 February 2019
          Page count
          Pages: 18
          Funding
          This study was funded by National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant R03 DC010246, awarded to the first author.
          Categories
          research-article, Research Article
          Hearing
          Research Articles

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