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Biomedicine

Volume: 43 Issue: 5

  • Open Access
  • Original Article

Emotional state of patients with mild traumatic brain injury

Venera Kemelova1, Dzhamalbek Turgumbaev2, Gulzira Baigazhanova3, Gulina Sydykova3

1Department of Neurology, Medical Rehabilitation Center Kyrgyz Research Institute of Balneology and Rehabilitation Treatment, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
2Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Kyrgyz State Medical Institute for Retraining and Advanced Training named after S. B. B. B. Daniyarova, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
3Department of Psychology, Kyrgyz National University named after Jusup Balasagyn, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

Corresponding author: Dzhamalbek Turgumbaev. Email: [email protected]

Year: 2023, Page: 1558-1561, Doi: https://doi.org/10.51248/.v43i5.3375

Abstract

Introduction and Aim: Psychological effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are frequently present in addition to neurological deficits. The purpose of this study is to assess the emotional state of patients with mild TBI in the remote period.
Methods: This study included 78 patients aged 22–53 years with a reliably established diagnosis of mild TBI, with damage duration ranging from 1–5 years. The mean age was (34.6±3.2 years). To determine the level of anxiety, the Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale was used.
Results: The testing revealed that patients with suicidal thoughts had a significantly higher level of anxiety (34.2%) than the patients with TBI in the main group (27.5%). Comparative analysis between the two groups showed that the uselessness was more characteristic for suicides (22.8±0.14), who considered themselves completely useless than patients with TBI (20.6±1.36) with reliability (t = 4.2; p<0.001).
Conclusion: Due to the damage that post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can do to the body, especially to mental health, it is important to use medical and psychosocial rehabilitation as early as possible in the treatment stage to figure out the type and severity of the psychoemotional disorder and correct the psychosomatic state using psychopharmacological and psychotherapeutic effects.

Keywords: Traumatic brain injury; emotional state; anxiety; depression; psychotherapy; mixed anxiety-depressive disorder

Cite this article

Venera Kemelova, Dzhamalbek Turgumbaev, Gulzira Baigazhanova, Gulina Sydykova. Emotional state of patients with mild traumatic brain injury. Biomedicine: 2023; 43(5): 1558-1561

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