Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02116673

Influence of Cognitive Rest on Minor Traumatic Brain Injury

The Influence of Cognitive Rest and Graduated Return to Usual Activities on Minor Traumatic Brain Injury

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (actual)
Sponsor
Mount Sinai Hospital, Canada · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
17 Years – 64 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Background: Head injury is a common presentation to family medicine clinics and emergency departments (EDs), and the majority will not result in intracranial injury requiring neurosurgical consultation, but will have symptoms of mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI). It is estimated between 15-50% of patients with MTBI develop post-concussive syndrome (PCS). Research in the management of MTBI and prevention of PCS has been scarce to date. Although expert consensus recommends cognitive rest and graduated return to usual activities, these and other interventions are not based on prospective clinical evidence. Objective: The purpose of this study is to determine if providing graduated return to usual activities discharge instructions to MTBI patients in the ED decreases MTBI symptoms post-injury as compared to providing usual ED MTBI discharge instructions. Study Design: This will be a pragmatic, single-centered, 2-arm parallel-group, superiority randomized trial. Patient Population: Male and female patients presenting to the ED ages greater than 17 and less than 65 with the Canadian Emergency Department Information System (CEDIS) presenting complaint of "head injury". Outcomes: The primary outcome of this study is to determine if patients whom receive graduated return to usual activity discharge instructions have more clinically significant decreases in their Post-Concussion Symptom Score (PCSS) 2 weeks after MTBI versus patients who received usual care MTBI discharge instructions. Secondary outcomes include the intervention group's compliance with the intervention, comparison of PCSS between groups 4 weeks after initial ED visit, comparison of groups' number of return visit(s) to either an ED or physician's office, and the mean number of days of school or work missed for each group. Hypothesis: Given cognitive rest and graduated return to usual activities are concepts recommended by expert consensus, it is expected patients who follow the graduated return to usual activities and cognitive rest guidelines will have less MTBI symptoms at two weeks after ED discharge.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCognitive restThe intervention is providing discharge instructions instructing cognitive rest and graduated return to usual activities in patients whom have experienced minor traumatic brain injury.
OTHERUsual careThese are usual care emergency department discharge instructions provided at emergency department discharge for minor traumatic brain injury.

Timeline

Start date
2014-07-01
Primary completion
2015-07-01
Completion
2015-07-01
First posted
2014-04-17
Last updated
2015-09-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02116673. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.