Sichuan jingshen weisheng (Jun 2022)

Application of event-related potential P300 in the evaluation of cognitive dysfunction in patients with traumatic brain injury

  • Zhong Jun,
  • Liu Yang,
  • Xu Jianfeng,
  • Zhang Hai,
  • Liao Shuai,
  • Wen Qianhui,
  • Wang Xue

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11886/scjsws20220401001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 3
pp. 241 – 244

Abstract

Read online

ObjectiveTo explore the application value of event-related potential P300 in the evaluation of cognitive dysfunction in patients with traumatic brain injury.MethodsFrom January to September 2021, a total of 36 patients with traumatic brain injury who were conservatively treated in the Neurosurgery Department of the Third Hospital of Mianyang and met the diagnostic criteria were selected as the experimental group. And 36 participants were recruited from the family members and carers of other patients in the hospital as the control group. Oddball paradigm was used to measure the event-related potential P300. Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) were used to assess the cognitive function of the subjects. The latency and amplitude of P300, MoCA and MMSE scores were compared between two groups. The detection rates of P300 latency, MoCA and MMSE on cognitive dysfunction in patients with traumatic brain injury were compared.ResultsMoCA and MMSE scores in experimental group were lower than those in control group [(18.08±4.29) vs. (27.36±1.20), (22.53±3.54) vs. (28.11±1.09), t=-12.510, -9.041, P<0.05]. The latency of P300 in experimental group was higher than that in control group [(406.08±26.95)ms vs. (367.08±22.50)ms, t=6.665, P<0.05], and the amplitude was lower than that in control group [(7.76±0.90)μV vs.(9.87±0.99)μV, t=-9.459, P<0.05]. In experimental group, the positive detective rate of P300 latency and MoCA on cognitive dysfunction were higher than that in MMSE (χ2=5.675, 7.604, P<0.05).ConclusionEvent-related potential P300 can be used as an objective clinical indicator for evaluating cognitive dysfunction in patients with traumatic brain injury.

Keywords