Litcius/Paper detail

Persistent Postconcussion Symptoms: An Expert Consensus-Based Definition Using the Delphi Method

Corinne Lagacé-Legendre, Valérie Boucher, Sébastien Robert, Pier‐Alexandre Tardif, Marie‐Christine Ouellet, Élaine de Guise, Geneviève Boulard, Pierre Frémont, Marcel Émond, Lynne Moore, Natalie Le Sage

2020Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To provide an expert consensus definition of persistent postconcussion symptoms following a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). PARTICIPANTS: Canadian healthcare professionals caring for patients with mTBI. DESIGN: Online Delphi process. MAIN MEASURES: A first Delphi round documented important dimensions or criteria to consider when defining persistent symptoms. Expert opinions were then resubmitted in 4 subsequent Delphi rounds and their relevance was rated using a 9-point Likert scale. An item with a median rating of 7 or more and a sufficient level of agreement were considered consensual. RESULTS: After 5 rounds, consensus was reached on a set of criteria that can be summarized as follows: presence of any symptom that cannot be attributed to a preexisting condition and that appeared within hours of an mTBI, that is still present every day 3 months after the trauma, and that has an impact on at least one sphere of a person's life. CONCLUSION: This Delphi consensus proposes a set of criteria that support a more uniform definition of persistent symptoms in mild TBI among clinicians and researchers. This definition may help clinicians better identify persistent postconcussion symptoms and improve patient management.

Topics & Concepts

Delphi methodLikert scaleDelphiSet (abstract data type)Relevance (law)PsychologyMedicineConcussionPhysical therapyMedical emergencyPoison controlInjury preventionComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceDevelopmental psychologyPolitical scienceLawProgramming languageOperating systemTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchTraumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular DisturbancesS100 Proteins and Annexins