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Cognitive predictors of self-awareness in patients with acquired brain injury along neuropsychological rehabilitation.

Dolores VillalobosJose Manuel CaperosÁlvaro BilbaoFrancisco López-MuñozJavier Pacios
Published in: Neuropsychological rehabilitation (2020)
Previous research has identified a critical role of executive function and memory in self-awareness, a metacognitive capacity often impaired in acquired brain injury. Through this observational study, we aimed to explore the effect of cognitive rehabilitation on the predictive value of these variables, as also whether any of them can predict the level of self-awareness once the cognitive rehabilitation is completed. 69 patients underwent a neuropsychological assessment, including self-awareness, at admission to and discharge from a cognitive rehabilitation process. Regression analysis was performed at these two moments and a third one was conducted to evaluate whether any of the variables at admission predicted the level of self-awareness at discharge. Verbal fluency was found to be the best predictor of self-awareness, both at admission and discharge. In addition, inhibition and cognitive flexibility, as well as episodic memory, appeared as significant predictors of post-rehabilitation self-awareness. Finally, verbal fluency was revealed as the unique pre-rehabilitation predictor of subsequent level of self-awareness following rehabilitation. While post-acute self-awareness is predicted by non-specific executive measures, the cognitive improvement putatively induced by neuropsychological rehabilitation reveals the contribution of more specific executive and memory functions. Importantly, pre-rehabilitation verbal fluency scores predicted the level of self-awareness after cognitive rehabilitation.
Keyphrases
  • brain injury
  • working memory
  • emergency department
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • mild cognitive impairment
  • single cell
  • intensive care unit
  • prognostic factors
  • drug induced
  • blood brain barrier