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Postural Stability and Neuropsychological Deficits After Concussion in Collegiate Athletes.

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TLDR
Athletes with cerebral concussion demonstrated acute balance deficits, which are likely the result of not using information from the vestibular and visual systems effectively, and more research is necessary to determine the best neuropsychological test battery for assessing sport-related concussion.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Postural stability and neuropsychological testing are gradually becoming integral parts of postconcussion assessment in athletes. Clinicians, however, sometimes question the viability of instituting preseason baseline testing and the value of these results in making return-to-play decisions. Our purpose was to examine the course of recovery on various postural stability and neuropsychological measures after sport-related concussion. A secondary goal was to determine if loss of consciousness and amnesia, both of which are heavily weighted in most of the concussion classification systems, affect the rate of recovery. DESIGN AND SETTING: All subjects underwent a battery of baseline postural stability and neuropsychological tests before the start of their respective seasons. Any athletes subsequently injured were followed up at postinjury days 1, 3, and 5. Matched control subjects were assessed using the same test battery at the same time intervals. SUBJECTS: We studied 36 Division I collegiate athletes who sustained a concussion and 36 matched control subjects. MEASUREMENTS: We assessed postural stability using the Sensory Organization Test on the NeuroCom Smart Balance Master System and the Balance Error Scoring System. Neurocognitive functioning was measured with several neuropsychological tests: Trail-Making Test, Wechsler Digit Span Test, Stroop Color Word Test, and Hopkins Verbal Learning Test. RESULTS: Injured subjects demonstrated postural stability deficits, as measured on both the Sensory Organization Test and Balance Error Scoring System. These deficits were significantly worse than both preseason scores and matched control subjects' scores on postinjury day 1. Only the results on the Trail-Making Test B and Wechsler Digit Span Test Backward resulted in a logical recovery curve that could explain lowered neuropsychological performance due to concussive injury. Significant differences were revealed between the control and injured groups at day 1 postinjury, but a significant decline between baseline and postinjury scores was not demonstrated. Loss of consciousness and amnesia were not associated with increased deficits or slowed recovery on measures of postural stability or neurocognitive functioning. CONCLUSIONS: Athletes with cerebral concussion demonstrated acute balance deficits, which are likely the result of not using information from the vestibular and visual systems effectively. Neurocognitive deficits are more difficult to identify in the acute stages of concussion, although concentration, working memory, immediate memory recall, and rapid visual processing appear to be mildly affected. More research is necessary to determine the best neuropsychological test battery for assessing sport-related concussion.

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Citations
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Baseline Performance of NCAA Athletes on a Concussion Assessment Battery: A Report from the CARE Consortium

TL;DR: This large, racially and socio-economically diverse cohort of male and female college athletes found no evidence that student-athletes participating in contact sports have clinically meaningful deficits in pre-season cognitive and balance testing and suggest potential limitations when using published ImPACT norms when evaluating injured athletes.
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The effects of menstrual cycle phase on clinical measures of concussion in healthy college-aged females

TL;DR: Preseason neurocognitive and postural stability baseline tests are stable across the menstrual cycle, regardless of OCP use, and decreased performance on these measures following a suspected concussion is likely not attributable to menstrual cycle phase or use of O CP.
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Vestibular Dysfunction after Subconcussive Head Impact

TL;DR: The results suggest that mild head impact leads to a transient dysfunction in vestibular processing, which deters walking stability during task performance.
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Return to play after sports concussion in elite and non-elite athletes?

TL;DR: The non-elite athlete may not have the same resources available as the elite athlete and as a result will generally be managed more conservatively, and be managed with less expertise and with limited resources.
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White matter during concussion recovery: Comparing diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI).

TL;DR: This study provides the first longitudinal evaluation of concussion from acute injury to RTP using combined DTI and NODDI, significantly enhancing the understanding of the effects of concussion on white matter microstructure.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of Concussion in Collegiate and High School Football Players

TL;DR: Players who sustained one concussion in a season were three times more likely to sustain a second concussion in the same season compared with uninjured players, and contact with artificial turf appears to be associated with a more serious concussion than contact with natural grass.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between concussion and neuropsychological performance in college football players.

TL;DR: It is suggested that neuropsychological assessment is a useful indicator of cognitive functioning in athletes and that both history of multiple concussions and learning disability are associated with reduced cognitive performance.
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