Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
The purpose of this study is to test an innovative combination of direct-attention training and metacognitive training in the treatment of attention impairments in Veterans with moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) who report experiencing attentional problems. Enrolled participants will be randomized to receive either the direct-attention training or metacognitive training first and then will be crossed over to receive the opposite intervention. The study will consist of two treatment periods of 4 weeks and a post-treatment 4 weeks later. In addition to the rehabilitation treatments, participants will also perform measures of complex functional activities (e.g., independent activities of daily living or IADLs) and neurocognitive tests of attention-control functions. Participants will also perform an attentional task that probes the function of three different attentional systems while brain wave activity (i.e., electroencephalography or EEG) is being recorded in order to assess changes in brain function that may be improved by the rehabilitation approach. Planned enrollment will be 36 Veterans.
Full description
Attention impairment is ubiquitous in TBI survivors. This is a devastating impairment because attention is the backbone of cognitive systems. Attention is requisite for other cognitive processes that are vital to everyday functioning such as memory, problem solving, language skills, and the cognitive control of behavior. Studies of attention training have shown improved attention on laboratory measures, but limited translation to real-world tasks. Notably, these previously-tested rehabilitation approaches have not included training in the very cognitive processes needed for translation of training to everyday tasks which include internal verbalization and self-monitoring, also called metacognitive strategies. One training method for metacognitive strategies has shown promise, but is lacking in basic attention training. Rehabilitation specialists have recently argued for a rehabilitation approach wherein both basic foundational attention and metacognitive strategies should be synergistically combined. Consequently, the investigators will test an innovative combination of direct-attention training and metacognitive training for which the other compensates disadvantages of each. Because of the promise of each type of training separately, and the potential additive effects of the combination, it is critical to test this combined attention and metacognitive training in Veteran survivors of chronic moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). The investigators will address the following two specific aims: the investigators propose to conduct a pilot study to examine cognitive rehabilitation therapy (CRT) effects in a group of Veterans with chronic moderate to severe TBI (m/sTBI), focused on remediating attention-control impairments using both direct-attention and metacognitive-strategy training approaches in a AB/BA crossover design with 1-month follow-up to address the following two specific aims: 1) Test treatment response to combined direct-attention and metacognitive-strategy training in Veterans with chronic m/sTBI; and 2) identify mechanisms and biomarkers of rehabilitation-related neuroplasticity. Under the first aim the investigators will test for effects of combined direct-attention and metacognitive-strategy training on measures of complex functional activities and neurocognitive tests of attention-control functions. Under the second aim, the investigators will test effects of the their CRT approach on behavioral and brain activity while participants perform a well-validated attentional task that probes the function of three dissociable attentional systems. The approach is innovative because it combines a theoretically motivated and novel approach to address a significant source of disability in Veteran survivors of TBI. The proposed research is significant because findings will form the foundation for a larger-scale trial to enable us to determine the durability of gains and the functional impact of treatment on Veteran's real world activities and to more positively shape healthcare for our Veterans who are suffering from TBI. Outcome measures will include standardized tests of neurocognitive functioning such as attention and other cognitive skills, measures of self care, ability to live independently, social role participation, life satisfaction, TBI-related quality of life, mood/anxiety, and attention-related scalp-recorded brain event-related potentials (ERPs, derived from electroencephalography).
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal