Abstract

Cognitive functioning impacts clinical symptoms, treatment response, and quality of life in adults with functional/nonepileptic seizures (FS/NES), but no study to date examines effects of behavioral FS/NES treatment on cognition in these patients. We hypothesized that there would be a reduction in cognitive symptoms in participants with FS/NES and traumatic brain injury (TBI) following neurobehavioral therapy (NBT). We also hypothesized that select seizure-related, medication, subjective cognitive, and mental health symptoms would be negatively correlated with improvements in cognitive performance after NBT. Participants were 37 adults with TBI + FS/NES and 35 adults with TBI only, recruited from medical centers in the northeastern or southeastern U.S. TBI + FS/NES participants completed a 12 session NBT intervention, and TBI without seizures participants were not treated. All participants completed pre-post assessments of cognition (Montreal Cognitive Assessment [MoCA]) and baseline sociodemographic factors and mental health symptoms. Pre-post MoCA scores increased significantly in TBI + FS/NES participants (28/37 [75.7%] improved) but not in TBI comparisons (10/35 [28.6%] improved). Language, memory, and visuospatial/executive functions, but not attention, improved over time in the TBI + FS/NES group. Gains in cognition were concentrated in those TBI + FS/NES participants with likely baseline cognitive impairments (MoCA total score <26), and 9/17 of these participants moved from the “impaired” range at baseline (<26) to the “intact” range at endpoint (≥26). Lastly, participants taking fewer medications and reporting lower subjective cognitive difficulties at baseline showed larger pre-post MoCA total score improvements. Overall, results from this study suggest the potential for positive change in cognition in FS/NES and co-occurring TBI using evidence-based psychotherapy.

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