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Featured researches published by Treven C. Pickett.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2009

Cognitive sequelae of blast-related versus other mechanisms of brain trauma.

Heather G. Belanger; Tracy Kretzmer; Ruth E. Yoash-Gantz; Treven C. Pickett; Larry A. Tupler

The use of improvised explosive devices has become the hallmark of modern warfare and has resulted in an ever-increasing number of blast-related traumatic brain injuries (TBIs). Despite this fact, very little is actually known about the cognitive sequelae of blast-related TBIs. The purpose of the current study was to compare patterns of performance on neuropsychological measures in subjects who have sustained TBIs as a result of blast (or explosion) with those who have sustained TBIs from non-blast or blunt force trauma (motor vehicle accident, fall, assault, etc.). Participants were categorized as blast-related TBI or non-blast-related TBI and according to severity of injury (mild or moderate-to-severe). No main effects were observed in analysis of covariance between blast-related TBI participants and non-blast-related TBI participants across any of the neuropsychological variables, although an interaction was observed on a visual memory test showing stronger performance for mild blast-related and poorer performance for moderate-to-severe blast-related participants compared with both non-blast groups. Overall, the results do not provide any strong evidence that blast is categorically different from other TBI mechanisms, at least with regard to cognitive sequelae on select measures. Additional findings included a marginally increased incidence of reported posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms among blast-injured participants. (JINS, 2009, 15, 1-8.).


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2008

Characteristics and Rehabilitation Outcomes Among Patients With Blast and Other Injuries Sustained During the Global War on Terror

Nina A. Sayer; Christine E. Chiros; Barbara J. Sigford; Steven Scott; Barbara Clothier; Treven C. Pickett; Henry L. Lew

OBJECTIVE To describe characteristics and rehabilitation outcomes among patients who received inpatient rehabilitation for blast and other injuries sustained in Iraq and Afghanistan during the Global War on Terror. DESIGN Observational study based on chart review and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) administrative data. SETTING The 4 VA polytrauma rehabilitation centers (PRCs). PARTICIPANTS Service members (N=188) admitted to a PRC during the first 4 years of the Global War on Terror for injuries sustained during Operation Iraqi Freedom or Operation Enduring Freedom. INTERVENTION Multidisciplinary comprehensive rehabilitation program. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES Cognitive and motor FIM instrument gain scores and length of stay (LOS). RESULTS Most war-injured patients had traumatic brain injury, injuries to several other body systems and organs, and associated pain. Fifty-six percent had blast-related injuries, and the pattern of injuries was unique among those with injuries secondary to blasts. Soft tissue, eye, oral and maxillofacial, otologic, penetrating brain injuries, symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, and auditory impairments were more common in blast-injured patients than in those with war injuries of other etiologies. The mechanism of the injury did not predict functional outcomes. LOS was variable, particularly for those with blast injuries. Patients with low levels of independence at admissions made the most progress but remained more dependent at discharge compared with other PRC patients. The rate of gain was slower in this low-functioning group. CONCLUSIONS Blasts produce a unique constellation of injuries but do not make a unique contribution to functional gain scores. Findings underscore the need for assessment and treatment of pain and mental health problems among patients with polytrauma and blast-related injuries. Patients with polytrauma have lifelong needs, and future research should examine needs over time after community re-entry.


Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development | 2007

Motor impairment after severe traumatic brain injury: A longitudinal multicenter study.

William C. Walker; Treven C. Pickett

Neuromotor impairment is a common sequela of severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) but has been understudied relative to neurocognitive outcomes. This multicenter cohort study describes the longitudinal course of neurological examination-based motor abnormalities after severe TBI. Subjects were enrolled from the four lead Department of Veterans Affairs and Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center sites. The study cohort consisted of 102 consecutive patients (active duty, veteran, or military dependent) with severe TBI who consented during acute rehabilitation for data collection and completed all follow-up evaluations. Paresis, ataxia, and postural instability measures showed a pattern of improvement over time, with the greatest improvement occurring between the inpatient (baseline) and 6-month follow-up assessments. Involuntary movement disorders were rare at all time points. Two years following acute rehabilitation, more than one-third of subjects continued to display a neuromotor abnormality on basic neurological examination. Persistence of tandem gait abnormality was particularly common.


Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation | 2009

Relationship between processing speed and executive functioning performance among OEF/OIF veterans: implications for postdeployment rehabilitation

Lonnie A. Nelson; Ruth E. Yoash-Gantz; Treven C. Pickett; Thomas A. Campbell

BackgroundComorbid mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common clinical presentation among troops returning from Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF). This study examined processing speed and executive functioning in a sample of OEF/OIF veterans who had sustained mTBI, a subset of whom also had comorbid PTSD. MethodsFifty-three OEF/OIF veterans with a history of mTBI completed Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III Symbol Search and Digit Symbol—Coding subscales, Stroop Word, color and color-word trials, and Trail Making Test, Parts A and B as part of a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery. ResultsExcluding from analysis those who scored poorly on effort testing, multiple regression showed that measures of processing speed accounted for 43% of the variance in performance on the Trail Making Test, Part B and 50% of the variance in performance on the Stroop task. Significant differences in processing speed and executive functioning were found on the basis of presence of comorbid PTSD. Stroop Color (F = 9.27, df = 52, P < .004) and Stroop Color Word (F = 7.19, df = 52, P < .01) scores differed significantly between the groups. Those having comorbid PTSD (+TBI/+PTSD) scored significantly poorer than the mTBI-only group (+TBI/−PTSD). Implications for treatment of the comorbid conditions are discussed.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2008

Provider Perspectives on Rehabilitation of Patients With Polytrauma

Greta Friedemann-Sánchez; Nina A. Sayer; Treven C. Pickett

OBJECTIVES To describe, from the perspective of U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) polytrauma rehabilitation providers, (1) patients with combat-related polytrauma and their rehabilitation, (2) polytrauma patient family member involvement in rehabilitation, and (3) the impact on providers of providing polytrauma rehabilitation. DESIGN Qualitative study based on rapid assessment process methodology, which included semistructured interviews, observation, and use of a field liaison. SETTING The 4 VA polytrauma rehabilitation centers (PRCs). PARTICIPANTS Fifty-six purposefully selected PRC providers and providers from consulting services. INTERVENTIONS Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES Provider self-report of polytrauma patient characteristics, polytrauma patient family member involvement in rehabilitation, and the impact of polytrauma rehabilitation on providers themselves. RESULTS According to PRC providers, polytrauma patients are younger than VA rehabilitation patients. Strong military identities affect rehabilitation needs and reactions to severe injury. The public and the media have particular interest in war-injured patients. Patients with blast-related polytrauma have unique constellations of visible (including amputations, craniectomies, and burns) and invisible (including traumatic brain injury, pain, and posttraumatic stress disorder) injuries. Providers have adjusted treatment strategies and involved services outside of rehabilitation because of this clinical complexity. Family members are intensely involved in rehabilitation and have service needs that may surpass those of families of rehabilitation patients without polytrauma. Sources of provider stress include new responsibilities, media attention, increased oversight, and emotional costs associated with treating severely injured young patients and their families. Providers also described the work as deeply rewarding. CONCLUSIONS The VA should prioritize the identification or development and implementation of strategies to address family member needs and to monitor and ensure that PRC providers have access to appropriate resources. Future research should determine whether findings generalize to patients injured in other wars and to people who sustain polytraumatic injuries outside of a war zone, including victims of terrorist attacks.


Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development | 2007

Objectively assessing balance deficits after TBI: Role of computerized posturography.

Treven C. Pickett; Laleh S. Radfar-Baublitz; Scott D. McDonald; William C. Walker; David X. Cifu

Balance impairment, or postural instability, is a common source of residual physical disability after severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Standardized functional measures such as the Functional Independence Measure (FIM) do not specifically assess balance. Furthermore, no agreement exists as to the optimal way to objectively measure balance problems in the TBI population. Technological advances have led to force-plate balance measurement known as computerized posturography testing (CPT). Published CPT data for severe TBI are lacking, and the feasibility of using CPT during rehabilitation has not been described. This study described CPT findings in 21 ambulatory patients with severe TBI who were undergoing inpatient rehabilitation at a Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center. Results demonstrated the utility of CPT in detecting and quantifying postural instability. Comparisons with the normative database indicate that the sample had a high degree of balance impairment despite some participants having reached the ceiling of the FIM ambulation scale at discharge from the acute rehabilitation setting. The quantitative CPT measures are a promising way to characterize postural instability in severe TBI populations.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2014

No association between RORA polymorphisms and PTSD in two independent samples

Guia Guffanti; Allison E. Ashley-Koch; Andrea L. Roberts; Melanie E. Garrett; Nadia Solovieff; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; I. De Vivo; Michelle F. Dennis; Hardeep Ranu; Jordan W. Smoller; Yangfan P. Liu; Shaun Purcell; Mira Brancu; Patrick S. Calhoun; Eric B. Elbogen; John A. Fairbank; Jeffrey M. Hoerle; Kimberly T. Green; Harold Kudler; Christine E. Marx; Scott D. Moore; Rajendra A. Morey; Jennifer C. Naylor; Jennifer J. Runnals; Larry A. Tupler; Richard D. Weiner; Elizabeth E. Van Voorhees; Marinell Miller-Mumford; Scott D. McDonald; Treven C. Pickett

Logue et al.1 reported genome-wide significant association between a polymorphism (rs8042149) in the RORA gene, encoding the retinoic acid orphan receptor A, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a cohort of trauma-exposed white non-Hispanic US veterans and their partners. The genome-wide association study yielded evidence of association for three additional SNPs at the 10-6 threshold in the same cohort (rs8041061, rs8024133, rs11071561). Amstadter et al.2 reported a significant association between rs8042149 and PTSD symptoms in the 2004 Florida Hurricane Study. The RORA gene encodes a nuclear hormone receptor that regulates the transcription activity of nearby genes. It is widely expressed in the brain, where it protects cortical neurons against oxidative stress-induced apoptosis by increasing the expression of antioxidant proteins.1 Logue et al.1 proposed that genetic variations in RORA may alter its expression, reducing the capacity of neurons to respond to biochemical stressors induced by traumatic stress.


Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine | 2017

Sleep Disturbances in OEF/OIF/OND Veterans: Associations with PTSD, Personality, and Coping.

Mackenzie J. Lind; Emily Brown; Leah V. Farrell-Carnahan; Ruth C. Brown; Sage E. Hawn; Erin C. Berenz; Scott D. McDonald; Treven C. Pickett; Carla Kmett Danielson; Suzanne E. Thomas; Ananda B. Amstadter

STUDY OBJECTIVES Sleep disturbances are well documented in relation to trauma exposure and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but correlates of such disturbances remain understudied in veteran populations. We conducted a preliminary study of sleep disturbances in Operation Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Operation New Dawn veterans (n = 133; mean [standard deviation] age = 29.8 [4.7] y). METHODS Veterans were assigned to one of three groups based on responses to the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale: control (no trauma-exposure [TE] or PTSD), TE, and PTSD. Sleep disturbance was assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Measures of resilience, trauma load, personality, coping, alcohol use, and mild traumatic brain injury were also assessed via self-report. RESULTS The PTSD group had significantly more disturbed sleep (PSQI global score mean = 8.94, standard deviation = 3.12) than control (mean = 5.27, standard deviation = 3.23) and TE (mean = 5.34, standard deviation = 3.17) groups, but there were no differences between TE and control. The same pattern emerged across most PSQI subscales. Results of linear regression analyses indicated that current smoking, Army (versus other military branches), neuroticism, and using substances to cope were all significant correlates of higher sleep disturbance, whereas post-deployment social support was associated with less sleep disturbance. However, when combined together into a model with PTSD status, only neuroticism and substance use coping remained significant as predictors of more disturbed sleep. CONCLUSIONS These initial findings suggest that TE itself may not be an independent risk factor for disturbed sleep in veterans, and that neurotic personality and a tendency to cope by using substances may partially explain sleep disturbance, above and beyond a diagnosis of PTSD.


Archive | 2010

Psychological Rehabilitation for US Veterans

Thomas A. Campbell; Treven C. Pickett; Ruth E. Yoash-Gantz

The cycle of military deployment can be a stressful experience that is associated with a number of adverse impacts. This chapter details psychological stressors and their sequelae during the cycles of deployment, beginning with pre-deployment stressors, followed by stressors that occur in the military theater of deployment, and finally focusing on post-deployment mental-health issues. During the pre-deployment phase, the service member often is attempting to handle multiple competing social, vocational, and emotional demands. Family responsibilities and pressures often mount during this time. To prepare for stressors that may be faced in the military theater, service members may undergo resiliency training. While in the war theater, service members may face a host of stressful experiences, including military combat. The psychological impact of these stressors, while apparent at times during deployment, may not be fully felt until the service member has returned from deployment. After deployment, service members may seek and receive treatment for a number of mental-health conditions, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, substance abuse, and adjustment following traumatic brain injury (TBI). This chapter outlines the various ways that these conditions are being addressed among post-deployed service members in the USA


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2018

A cluster-analytic approach to determining drinking motives and personality typologies: Trauma group differences and respective relations to PTSD and problematic alcohol use.

Sage E. Hawn; Erin D. Kurtz; Emily Brown; Ruth C. Brown; Erin C. Berenz; Scott D. McDonald; Treven C. Pickett; Carla Kmett Danielson; Ananda B. Amstadter

Veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are at elevated risk for alcohol use problems, a relationship commonly explained by using alcohol to cope with unpleasant symptoms of PTSD. However, patterns of alcohol use motives, more broadly, have not been well characterized in veteran samples, nor have they been evaluated in the context of other relevant factors, such as normative personality traits. The aims of the present study were to identify empirically derived drinking motive and personality typologies to determine whether these typologies differ as a function of PTSD status (i.e., nontrauma control, trauma exposed−no PTSD, and PTSD) and to evaluate associations between typology and PTSD symptom severity and alcohol consumption, respectively. Cluster analyses identified a 4-cluster solution. Results indicated that these typologies differed significantly according to trauma group as well as across levels of PTSD symptom severity and alcohol use. Specifically, Cluster 4 represented individuals at highest risk for both PTSD symptom severity and alcohol use compared to all the other typologies; Cluster 1 demonstrated lowest risk for PTSD symptom severity and alcohol use compared to all other typologies; and although Clusters 2 and 3 did not differ according to PTSD symptom severity, individuals in Cluster 2 had significantly higher alcohol use. These results represent certain “at risk” versus “protective” typologies that may facilitate the identification of individuals at risk for comorbid PTSD and problematic alcohol use.

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Scott D. McDonald

Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center

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William C. Walker

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Ananda B. Amstadter

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Carla Kmett Danielson

Medical University of South Carolina

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F. Gerard Moeller

Virginia Commonwealth University

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James M. Bjork

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Laura M. Franke

Virginia Commonwealth University

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