Institut Régional de Formation aux
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Auteur Éléonore Bayen |
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A comprehensive picture of 4-year outcome of severe brain injuries. Results from the PariS-TBI study / Claire Jourdan in Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Vol. 59 n° 2 (April 2016)
[article] A comprehensive picture of 4-year outcome of severe brain injuries. Results from the PariS-TBI study [texte imprimé] / Claire Jourdan, Auteur ; Éléonore Bayen, Auteur ; Pascale Pradat-Diehl, Auteur . - 2016 . - p. 100-106.
Langues : Anglais (eng) Français (fre)
in Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine > Vol. 59 n° 2 (April 2016) . - p. 100-106
Catégories : PATHOLOGIE
Accident cérébrovasculaire
SOCIOLOGIE
Qualité vie
SANTÉ PHYSIQUE
Traumatisme crânien
INFORMATION & COMMUNICATION
ÉtudeTags : Brain injuries Craniocerebral trauma Quality of life International classification of functioning disability and health Résumé : Objectives: Survivors of severe traumatic brain injury have a great variety of impairments and participation restrictions. Detailed descriptions of their long-term outcome are critical. We aimed to assess brain injury outcome for subjects with traumatic brain injury in terms of the International classification of functioning, disability and health.
Materials and methods: Four-year follow-up of an inception cohort of adults with severe traumatic brain injury by using face-to-face interviews with patients and proxies.
Results: Among 245 survivors at 4 years, 147 were evaluated (80% male, mean age: 32.5±14.2 years at injury); 46 (32%) presented severe disability, 58 (40%) moderate disability, and 40 (28%) good recovery. Most frequent somatic problems were fatigue, headaches, other pain, and balance. One quarter of subjects had motor impairments. Rates of cognitive complaints ranged from 25 to 68%, the most frequent being memory, irritability, slowness and concentration. With the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, 43% had anxiety and 25% depression. Overall, 79% were independent in daily living activities and 40 to 50% needed help for outdoor or organizational activities on the BICRO-39. Most had regular contacts with relatives or close friends but few contacts with colleagues or new acquaintances. Subjects spent little time in productive activities such as working, studying, looking after children or voluntary work. Quality of life on the QOLIBRI scale was associated with disability level (P <0.0001).
Conclusion: Management of late brain injury needs to focus on cognitive difficulties, particularly social skills, to enhance patient participation in life.En ligne : http://www.em-consulte.com/produit/rehab Permalink : https://ifm3r.centredoc.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=13535 [article]Ecological Assessment Battery for Numbers (EABN) for brain-damaged patients: Standardization and validity study / Marie Villain in Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Vol. 58 n° 5 (October 2015)
[article] Ecological Assessment Battery for Numbers (EABN) for brain-damaged patients: Standardization and validity study [texte imprimé] / Marie Villain, Auteur ; Cécile Tarabon-Prevost, Auteur ; Éléonore Bayen, Auteur . - 2015 . - p. 283-288.
Langues : Anglais (eng) Français (fre)
in Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine > Vol. 58 n° 5 (October 2015) . - p. 283-288
Catégories : PATHOLOGIE
Accident cérébrovasculaire
SANTÉ PHYSIQUE
Traumatisme crânien
SOCIOLOGIE
Activités vie quotidienneTags : Acalculia Ecological assessment Stroke Traumatic brain injury Activities of daily living Résumé : Objectives: Number-processing may be altered following brain injury and might affect the everyday life of patients. We developed the first ecological tool to assess number-processing disorders in brain-injured patients, the Ecological Assessment Battery for Numbers (EABN; in French, the BENQ). The aim of the present study was to standardize and validate this new tool.
Material and methods: Standardization included 126 healthy controls equally distributed by age, sex and sociocultural level. First, 17 patients were evaluated by the EABN; then scores for a subgroup of 10 were compared with those from a French analytical calculation test, the Évaluation Clinique des Aptitudes Numériques (ECAN). The concordance between the EABN and the ECAN was analyzed to determine construct validity. Discrimination indexes were calculated to assess the sensitivity of the subtests.
Results: Standardization highlighted a major effect of sociocultural level. In total, 9 of 17 patients had a pathological EABN score, with difficulties in telling time, making appointments and reading numerical data. The results of both the EABN and ECAN tests were concordant (Kendall's w =0.97). Finally, the discriminatory power was good, particularly for going to the movies, cheque-writing and following a recipe: scores were>0.4.
Conclusion: The EABN is a new tool to assess number-processing disorders in adults. This tool has been standardized and has good psychometric properties for patients with brain injury.En ligne : http://www.em-consulte.com/produit/rehab Permalink : https://ifm3r.centredoc.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=12900 [article]