Interventions and cognitive functioning in adults with traumatic spinal cord injuries: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Nicole PachecoShirin MollayevaBinu JacobAngela ColantonioTatyana MollayevaPublished in: Disability and rehabilitation (2019)
Evidence on the effects of interventions on cognitive functioning in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury is sparse and inconclusive, so work in this area is timely. It is valuable to know not only which interventions are effective for improving cognition, but also how other commonly used interventions, intended to treat other injury sequela, can affect cognition. PROSPERO: CRD42018087238.Implications for rehabilitationHistorically, rehabilitation of patients with traumatic spinal cord injury has targeted physical impairments, with little attention to cognition; this research aimed to understand if current interventions are appropriate in light of the risk of patients' cognitive impairments. Evidence on the effects of drug therapy, diet and dietary supplements interventions on cognitive functioning in traumatic spinal cord injury is sparse and inconclusive.Combining multiple inpatient rehabilitation interventions shows a positive but heterogeneous effect on the cognitive functioning; interventions applied earlier show greater gains.A major challenge for clinicians is to select an outcome measure sensitive to change over time, and to relate the results to patients' change in cognitive abilities with intervention applicationResearch to understand the functional effect of spinal cord injury on the widely distributed networks of the central and autonomic nervous systems subserving cognition, is timely.
Keyphrases
- spinal cord injury
- spinal cord
- physical activity
- neuropathic pain
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- randomized controlled trial
- newly diagnosed
- mild cognitive impairment
- mental health
- palliative care
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- heart rate
- weight loss
- heart rate variability
- cancer therapy
- bone marrow
- patient reported
- electronic health record