TBI Facts
- Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a major global health and
socioeconomic problem.
Ref. Maas et al 2008.
- TBI is the leading cause of death and disability in young
adults (Langlois 2006).
- The incidence in elderly patients is increasing.
- TBI can strike us all, but males are about twice as likely
as females to experience a TBI (Mushkudiani 2007).
- In younger patients Road Traffic Accidents are the most frequent
cause of injury; in older patients falls.
- Moderate and severe head injury (respectively) are associated
with a 2.3 and 4.5 times increased risk of Alzheimer's disease
(Finkelstein 2006).
- Direct medical costs and indirect costs (loss of productivity)
totalled an estimated $60 billion in the US in 2000.
Ref. Thurman 2001.
- Lifelong disability is common and includes:
- Impaired memory and problem solving
- Difficulty in managing stress and emotional upsets
- Problems in controlling one's temper
- Disturbed relationships
- TBI research is underfunded
Ref. Sobocki et al 2007.
- None of the Phase III RCT's in severe and moderate TBI succeeded to convincingly demonstrate efficacy of new therapies with sufficient generalizibility.
- Problems in clinical trial design and analysis may have contributed to this failure.
References:
-
Moderate and severe traumatic brain injury in adults
Maas AIR, Stocchetti N, Bullock R.
The Lancet Neurology. 2008 Aug 7(8):728-741.
-
Epidemiology and economics of head trauma.
Thurman DJ.
Miler L, Hayes R, eds. Head Trauma: basic, preclinical, and clinical directions. New York: Wiley and Sons, 2001:1193-202.
-
Brain research has high returns but Europe is lagging behind
Sobocki P, Olesen J, Jonsson B.
Eur J Neurol 2007;14:708-10.