Abstract

Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI, also known as a concussion) as a consequence of battlefield blast exposure or blunt force trauma has been of increasing concern to militaries during recent conflicts. This concern is due to the frequency of exposure to improvised explosive devices for forces engaged in operations both in Iraq and Afghanistan coupled with the recognition that mTBI may go unreported or undetected. Blasts can lead to mTBI through a variety of mechanisms. Debate continues as to whether exposure to a primary blast wave alone is sufficient to create brain injury in humans, and if so, exactly how this occurs with an intact skull. Resources dedicated to research in this area have also varied substantially among contributing NATO countries. Most of the research has been conducted in the US, focused on addressing uncertainties in management practices. Development of objective diagnostic tests should be a top priority to facilitate both diagnosis and prognosis, thereby improving management. It is expected that blast exposure and blunt force trauma to the head will continue to be a potential source of injury during future conflicts. An improved understanding of the effects of blast exposure will better enable military medical providers to manage mTBI cases and develop optimal protective measures. Without the immediate pressures that come with a high operational tempo, the time is right to look back at lessons learned, make full use of available data, and modify mitigation strategies with both available evidence and new evidence as it comes to light. Toward that end, leveraging our cooperation with the civilian medical community is critical because the military experience over the past 10 years has led to a renewed interest in many similar issues pertaining to mTBI in the civilian world. Such cross-fertilization of knowledge will undoubtedly benefit all. This paper highlights similarities and differences in approach to mTBI patient care in NATO and partner countries and provides a summary of and lessons learned from a NATO lecture series on the topic of mTBI, demonstrating utility of having patients present their experiences to a medical audience, linking practical clinical care to policy approaches.

Highlights

  • Over a decade ago, US medical personnel realized a high proportion of polytrauma cases evacuated from Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF) had unrecognized TBI

  • A large-scale survey by the Research and Development (RAND) corporation estimated that as many as 300,000 US military personnel who had served in OIF/OEF had sustained Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) [3]

  • Speculation arose that pure blast wave exposure was sufficient to create mTBI which defied conventional theories on mechanisms of head injury from blast where the intact skull would protect the brain from injury

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

US medical personnel realized a high proportion of polytrauma cases evacuated from Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF) had unrecognized TBI. These cases were primarily linked to blastrelated injury due to improvised explosive devices (IEDs) being the weapon of choice in insurgency warfare [1]. Theories arose that subsequent disability from mTBI would be longlasting, which again defied the conventional belief that mTBI was an acute injury and that persistent symptoms (beyond 3–6 months) occurred in a very small minority of individuals [5, 6]. Each subsection below represents a specific topic discussed at the lecture events and in the summary recommendations

PATIENT PERSPECTIVES
OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF mTBI AND NATO POLICIES
Canada Netherlands
EPIDEMIOLOGY OF mTBI
ACUTE mTBI MANAGEMENT
Acute Evaluation
Progressive Return to Duty
MANAGEMENT OF SYMPTOMS
Vestibular Symptoms
Endocrine Dysfunction
Sleep Disruption
Visual Complaints
THE IMPACT OF mTBI ON FAMILIES
COMORBID DISORDERS
Findings
THE NEXT DECADE OF mTBI RESEARCH
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