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The effect of bilateral, two-level cervical sympathetic chain blocks on specific symptom clusters for traumatic brain injury, independent of concomitant PTSD symptoms
Mulvaney, S. W., Lynch, J. H., Mahadevan, S., Dineen, K. J., & Rae Olmsted, K. L. (2024). The effect of bilateral, two-level cervical sympathetic chain blocks on specific symptom clusters for traumatic brain injury, independent of concomitant PTSD symptoms. Brain Sciences, 14(12), Article 1193. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14121193
Background/Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine if performing ultrasound-guided, bilateral, two-level cervical sympathetic chain blocks (2LCSBs) (performed on subsequent days) improves symptoms associated with traumatic brain injury (TBI) that do not overlap with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted between August 2022 and February 2023. We identified twenty patients who received bilateral 2LCSBs for PTSD and anxiety symptoms and who also had a history of TBI. Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory (NSI) scores were collected at baseline, one week, and one month post treatment in 13 males and 7 females. A sub-analysis of the first ten questions of the NSI, which we identified as not overlapping with PTSD or anxiety symptoms, generated an NSI sub-score. Results: Out of 20 patients, all showed improvement in their NSI scores and NSI sub-scores. The NSI sub-scores had a baseline average of 15.45 (on a 40-point scale); the average score at one week post treatment was 8.30; and that at one month post treatment was 7.80. This represents a 49.51% improvement in TBI symptoms which did not overlap with PTSD or anxiety symptoms between baseline and one month. Conclusions: The use of bilateral 2LCSBs may be helpful in treating patients with TBI, regardless of the presence of comorbid PTSD symptoms.