Management and Prognosis of Patients with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A Narrative Review.

Publication Type Review
Authors Gupta M, Khan S, Bunk S, Patil A, Stilling J, Singh J, Diwan S, Schatman M, Bajaj A, Abd-Elsayed A, Kosa S
Journal Brain Sci
Volume 16
Issue 3
Date Published 02/28/2026
ISSN 2076-3425
Abstract Background/Objectives: Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is the most common subtype of traumatic brain injury, where patients experience a multitude of symptoms from headaches to memory loss and mood changes. Consequently, there are known poor prognostic factors for mTBI that can impede recovery and alter management courses. This narrative review aims to synthesize and provide a critical assessment of the current diagnostic criteria, management, and prognostic factors for mTBI to inform practice guidelines. Methods: This study adopts a patient-centered approach, focusing on treating presenting symptoms and referring patients to specialists for abnormal exam findings as needed. These findings are based on a narrative review of existing literature and the medical opinions of experts in neurology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and pain medicine. The evidence supports that there are patient-related, injury-related, and contextual psychosocial factors that further complicate the long-term prognosis and management of mTBI. Conclusions: mTBI is defined by a set of diagnostic criteria: post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) lasting no longer than 24 h, loss of consciousness (LOC) not exceeding 30 min when present, and a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score between 13 and 15. Current treatment options include prescribed rest followed by a gradual return to physical activity, medication management for symptoms with cognitive behavioral therapy, or vestibular physical therapy. Notably, several of these diagnostic criteria overlap with known poor prognostic indicators. These prognostic factors can be grouped into three categories: injury-related factors (LOC, positive imaging findings, history of prior concussions, and high symptom burden); patient-related factors (demographic characteristics and psychiatric history); and contextual psychosocial factors.
DOI 10.3390/brainsci16030273
PubMed ID 41892617
PubMed Central ID PMC13023580
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