BACKGROUND: We investigated the impact of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) on attention, a prerequisite for behavioral and neurocognitive functioning. METHODS: Children aged 6 to 13 years who were diagnosed with TBI (n = 113; mean 1.7 years postinjury) were compared with children with a trauma control injury (not involving the head) (n = 53). TBI severity was defined as mild TBI with or without risk factors for complicated TBI (mild<sup>RF+</sup> TBI, n = 52;mild<sup>RF-</sup>TBI, n = 24) or moderate/severe TBI (n = 37). Behavioral functioning was assessed by using parent and teacher questionnaires, and the Attention Network Test assessed alerting, orienting, and executive attention. Ex-Gaussian modeling determined the contribution of extremely slow responses (lapses of attention) to mean reaction time (MRT). RESULTS: The TBI group showed higher parent and teacher ratings of attention and internalizing problems, higher parent ratings of externalizing problems, and lower intelligence than the control group (P≤.05, d≥ 0.34). No effect of TBI on alerting, orienting, and executive attention was observed (P ≥.55). MRT was slower in the TBI group (P =.008, d = 0.45), traced back to increased lapses of attention (P =.002, d = 0.52). The mildRF2 TBI group was unaffected, whereas the mild<sup>RF+</sup> TBI and moderate/severe TBI groups showed elevated parent ratings of behavior problems, lower intelligence, and increased lapses of attention (P ≤.03, d ≥ 0.48). Lapses of attention fully explained the negative relation between intelligence and parent-rated attention problems in the TBI group (P =.02). CONCLUSIONS: Lapses of attention represent a core attention deficit in children with mildRF+ TBI (even in the absence of intracranial pathology) or moderate/severe TBI, and relate to daily life problems after pediatric TBI.

doi.org/10.1542/peds.2015-0437, hdl.handle.net/1765/89990
Pediatrics (English Edition)
Department of Pediatrics

Königs, M., Heij, H. A., Van Der Sluijs, J. A., Vermeulen, J., Goslings, C., Luitse, J. S. K., … Oosterlaan, J. (2015). Pediatric traumatic brain injury and attention deficit. Pediatrics (English Edition), 136(3), 534–541. doi:10.1542/peds.2015-0437