Natural History of Concussion in Sport

Author:

Makdissi Michael1,Darby David2,Maruff Paul2,Ugoni Antony1,Brukner Peter1,McCrory Paul R.1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Health, Exercise and Sports Medicine, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia

2. CogState Ltd, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

Background Evidence-based clinical data are required for safe return to play after concussion in sport. Purpose The objective of this study was to describe the natural history of concussion in sport and identify clinical features associated with more severe concussive injury, using return-to-sport decisions as a surrogate measure of injury severity. Study Design Cohort study (prognosis); Level of evidence, 3. Methods Male elite senior, elite junior, and community-based Australian Rules football players had preseason baseline cognitive testing (Digit Symbol Substitution Test, Trail-Making Test—Part B, and CogSport computerized test battery). Players were recruited into the study after a concussive injury sustained while playing football. Concussed players were tested serially until all clinical features of their injury had resolved. Results Of 1015 players, 88 concussions were observed in 78 players. Concussion-associated symptoms lasted an average of 48.6 hours (95% confidence interval, 39.5-57.7 hours) with delayed return to sport correlated with ≥4 symptoms, headache lasting ≥60 hours, or self-reported “fatigue/fogginess.” Cognitive deficits using the Digit Symbol Substitution Test and Trail-Making Test—part B recovered concomitantly with symptoms, but computerized test results recovered 2 to 3 days later and remained impaired in 35% of concussed players after symptom resolution. Conclusion Delayed return to sport was associated with initially greater symptom load, prolonged headache, or subjective concentration deficits. Cognitive testing recovery varied, taking 2 to 3 days longer for computerized tests, suggesting greater sensitivity to impairment. Therefore, symptom assessment alone may be predictive of but may underestimate time to complete recovery, which may be better estimated with computerized cognitive testing.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

Reference40 articles.

1. Summary and Agreement Statement of the 1st International Symposium on Concussion in Sport, Vienna 2001

2. BarthJT, AlvesWM, RyanTV, et al. Mild head injury in sports: neuropsychological sequelae and recovery of function. In: LevinHS, EisenbergHM, BentonAL, eds. Mild Head Injury. New York: Oxford University Press; 1989:257–275.

3. Neuropsychology and clinical neuroscience of persistent post-concussive syndrome

4. SENSITIVITY OF THE CONCUSSION ASSESSMENT BATTERY

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