Biomedical Challenge to Warfighter, Veteran and Civilian ... · PDF fileBiomedical Challenge...

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Biomedical Challenge to Warfighter, Veteran and Civilian: Diagnosing and Treating Traumatic Brain Injury and PTSD Wesley R. Cole, Ph.D. Senior Clinical Research Director Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center Womack Army Medical Center, Fort Bragg, NC “Medically Ready Force…Ready Medical Force” 1

Transcript of Biomedical Challenge to Warfighter, Veteran and Civilian ... · PDF fileBiomedical Challenge...

Page 1: Biomedical Challenge to Warfighter, Veteran and Civilian ... · PDF fileBiomedical Challenge to Warfighter, Veteran and Civilian: Diagnosing and Treating Traumatic Brain Injury and

Biomedical Challenge to Warfighter, Veteran and Civilian: Diagnosing and Treating

Traumatic Brain Injury and PTSD

Wesley R. Cole, Ph.D. Senior Clinical Research Director

Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center Womack Army Medical Center, Fort Bragg, NC

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Disclosures

Contractor with General Dynamics Information Technology

I have no relevant financial relationships to disclose

The views expressed herein are those of the presenter and do not reflect the official policy of the Department of the

Army, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government

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TBI: Scope of the Problem

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Since 2000, in Service Members: • 344,000+ documented TBIs1

• ~82% are concussions • 8-23% of Service Members affected2

1. Defense Medical Surveillance System (DMSS), Theater Medical Data

Store (TMDS). 2000-2015 as of March 30, 2016

2.(Terrio et al., 2009; Vasterling et al., 2006)

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Common Causes of TBI in the Warfighter

• Blasts • Bullets • Fragments • Training

• Airborne operations • Combatives

• Falls • Motor vehicle crashes • Sports • Assaults

Image Source: www.dvidshub.net

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Where Do Injuries Occur?

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What is DVBIC?

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• Educational Tools & Resource Development

• TBI Awareness & Training

• Product Distribution & Dissemination

• Family Caregiver Program

• Regional Education Coordination

DVBIC’s Mission

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Research

• Clinical Investigations

• Congressionally Mandated Studies

• Epidemiological Research

• Statistical Analysis

• Translation of Research

• Program Evaluation

Clinical Affairs

• Care & Consultation

• Identification

& Sharing Best

Practices

• Clinical Guidelines

& Recommendations

• TBI Surveillance

• Regional Care

Coordination

• TBI Health Outcomes

Education

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DVBIC Locations

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DVBIC Clinical Recommendations

• Management of Headache

• Management of Sleep Disturbances

• Progressive Return to Activity: For Primary Care Managers

• Progressive Return to Activity: For Rehabilitation Providers

• Neuroimaging in the Non-Deployed Setting

• Assessment and Management of Visual Dysfunction

• Assessment and Management of Dizziness

• Neuroendocrine Dysfunction Screening Post Mild TBI

website: dvbic.dcoe.mil/resources/clinical-tools

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DVBIC Other Resources

• Fact Sheets for Patients and Providers

• E.g. Concussion Signs and Symptoms, Mild TBI and PTSD, Symptom Management (Headaches, Dizziness, Memory, Healthy Sleep, etc.)

• Free Monthly Webinars

• June 9: Cognitive Rehabilitation in Mild TBI: Applications in Military Service Members and Veterans

• July 14: Performance Triad: Sleep, Nutrition, and Exercise

• Annual DCoE Summit: September 13-15, 2016

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Fort Bragg Research at a Glance

• Over a dozen wide-ranging studies

• Evaluating computerized neurocognitive assessments as post-TBI screening tools

• Evaluation of Progressive Return to Activity clinical guidelines • Multi-site with Naval Medical Center San Diego and Camp Pendleton

• Investigation of post-traumatic headache • Epidemiology; Treatment with Botox (Dr. Alan Finkel)

• Nutrition based intervention (in collaboration with UNC, Walter Reed)

• Evaluation of visual function as an objective biomarker • Pupillary Light Reflex, Visual Tracking, Convergence

• Neuro-Opththalmic Device (NODe)

• Database of over 17,000 paratroopers • Over a dozen publications and counting

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Image Source: Capo-Aponte, 2014

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Challenge of Co-occurring Symptoms

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Predictors of Persistent Symptoms

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No Yes

• Loss of consciousness • Retrograde amnesia • Post-traumatic amnesia • Dizziness • Abnormal MRI • History of concussion

• High symptom reporting • Acute emotional distress • History of anxiety • History of depression • Pain • Negative expectations

(Carroll et al., 2004; Iverson, Dec. 2012; Luoto et al., Nov. 2012; Meares et al., 2011)

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NICoE Intrepid Spirit

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• National Intrepid Center of Excellence Satellite Site

• Bragg is 1 of 9 Sites located in DoD • Expand clinical, research, education

and training • “One Stop Shop” for TBI, PTSD, Pain • 25,000 sq ft/ Up to 60 staff members • Benefits

• Expanded work spaces • Enhanced access to care • Standardized treatments

• Operations at Bragg began 4 Jan 2016 Image Source: McMillan, 2016

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Intrepid Spirit at a Glance

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• Acute injury Walk-in Clinic (less than 7 days)

• Primary care (PA, NP, LPN, Neurologists) oversees treatment

• Multi-Disciplinary Evaluations include:

• Physical Therapy/Vestibular Evaluation

• Neuro-optometry Evaluation

• Neuropsychological Evaluation

• Behavioral Health Evaluation

• Development of individualized treatment plan

• Intensive Outpatient Program for some patients

• Case reviews every four weeks through discharge

• Performance Assessment of Recovery (PAR) Program

Image Source: McMillan, 2016

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Websites

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www.dvbic.dcoe.mil www.dcoe.mil

www.health.mil/dha