Hormonal Dysfunction in Paediatric Patients Admitted to Rehabilitation for Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: Analysis of the Associations with Rehabilitation Outcomes
Sara Galbiati, Federica Locatelli, Francesca Formica, Marco Pozzi, Sandra Strazzer

TL;DR
This study examines hormone levels in children with severe brain injuries and finds that low IGF-1 and high prolactin levels may be linked to recovery outcomes.
Contribution
The study identifies IGF-1 as a potential biomarker for neurological recovery in pediatric traumatic brain injury patients.
Findings
32% of patients had low IGF-1 levels, which correlated with neurological recovery.
69% of patients had high prolactin levels, possibly due to pain and stress.
IGF-1 sampling timing varied, limiting the study's conclusions.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury is often accompanied by defects in hormone levels, caused by either peripheral gland dysfunctions or by an insufficient central stimulation of hormone production. The epidemiology of endocrinological defects after traumatic brain injury is quite well described, but the consequences of hormone defects are largely unknown, especially in paediatric patients undergoing neurological rehabilitation. Only one previous study reported on a cohort of 20 children with traumatic brain injury and found a low incidence of hormone defects and a correlation between some hormone levels and neurological recovery. In this study, we performed a retrospective chart review on patients affected by severe subacute traumatic brain injury. Their levels of cortisol, ACTH, IGF-1, TSH, free T4, free T3, and prolactin were collected and compared with reference ranges; we then used regression…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances · Traumatic Brain Injury Research · Growth Hormone and Insulin-like Growth Factors
