Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03781076

Sleep After Adolescent Concussion

Sleep After Adolescent Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI, Aka Concussion): Nature, Contributors, and a Pilot Clinical Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
16 (actual)
Sponsor
Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Years – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this research study is to learn more about how sleep changes as teens recover from concussions. We also want to learn if we can improve sleep in teens who have concussions.

Detailed description

Mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBI), also called concussions, affect millions of individuals and cost over $17 billion in the US annually. Despite the term "mild," mTBI symptoms in children and adolescents (e.g., poor concentration, headache, emotional lability, slow thinking) seriously disrupt all aspects of a patient's functioning and impair quality of life. Although many youth recover quickly from mTBI, 30-60% remain symptomatic a month later. A biopsychosocial model was developed to account for protracted recoveries. In this model, acute symptoms result from a rapid cascade of injury-related neurometabolic and micro-structural aberrations. Since the vast majority of these abate within 1-3 weeks post-injury, persistent symptoms become increasingly difficult to explain physiologically, and psychosocial circumstances and patient behaviors become increasingly prominent contributors to impairment. There is reason to believe that, after mTBI, sleep is an underappreciated, modifiable behavior that drives impairment for youth with protracted recoveries. Care recommendations often mention sleep, but the field lacks empirically-supported guidelines and interventions for sleep after pediatric mTBI. Studies of mTBI in youth have used crude, unvalidated sleep measures. Also, there is no systematic research on non-injury contributors to poor sleep after mTBI, nor the nature and sources of advice that families receive. Lacking such data, one cannot develop empirically-based sleep recommendations. Finally, while there is reason to believe that a brief sleep intervention can alleviate mTBI symptoms in many youth who are recovering slowly, this needs to be tested in a well-powered clinical trial. The investigators are positioning to undertake such a trial, but must first document feasibility and acceptability of a sleep intervention after mTBI. To address these research gaps, the investigators are conducting a novel observational study and pilot clinical trial with these Aims: Aim 1: Establish more detailed and definitive links between protracted mTBI recovery and sleep in 12-18-year-olds. The investigators are undertaking a prospective, observational study, objectively tracking sleep and assessing recovery 3-4 weeks post-mTBI. The study team will also explore potential contributors to inadequate sleep, including sleep-related behaviors and detail the nature and sources of information on sleep post mTBI. Aim 2: Pilot-test a brief sleep intervention in the subset of youth who are slow to recover from mTBI and show short sleep. The study team will document feasibility and acceptability, and test its success in extending sleep duration.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSleep InterventionThe study therapist will outline the biopsychosocial model of mTBI recovery, highlighting the shift from biological injury to behavior (especially sleep behavior) as key driver of symptoms. The intervention will then apply well-established strategies from the pediatric psychology and insomnia literatures, encouraging conjoint problem-solving by parent and youth with the shared goal of maximizing nocturnal sleep. These include: pre-planning, problem-solving, development of a positive routine, commitment to sleep-promoting behaviors, self-monitoring, and positive reinforcement. The therapist will also teach a brief, self-guided pre-sleep relaxation exercise that has been used in insomnia treatment to maximize the benefit of additional sleep opportunity.

Timeline

Start date
2018-12-07
Primary completion
2019-12-31
Completion
2019-12-31
First posted
2018-12-19
Last updated
2020-07-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03781076. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.