Understanding Abnormal Examination Findings During Concussion Recovery: A Retrospective Chart Review.

IF 2.3 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Neurology. Clinical practice Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-30 DOI:10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200284
Nicholas S Streicher, Michael Popovich, Andrea Almeida, Bara Alsalaheen, Ingrid K Ichesco, Jeremiah Freeman, Matt Lorincz, James T Eckner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and objective: Physical examination findings in athletes with sport-related concussion (SRC) are not well described in the literature. The objective of this study was to describe physical examination findings during the first month following concussion in athletes, with a focus on the effect of sex, age, and time since injury.

Methods: This was a retrospective electronic medical record (EMR) review of physical examination findings in 500 patients aged 6-24 who were initially seen within 15 days of SRC at a multidisciplinary outpatient academic concussion clinic between 2017 and 2019. A standardized concussion examination built in the EMR recorded mental status, cranial nerve, vestibulo-ocular motor screen, and balance findings for all patients. The primary outcome was the frequency of abnormal examination findings during the first 30 days postinjury, which was further analyzed by sex, age, and time since injury using mixed logistic regression models.

Results: The most common abnormal examination findings overall were eyes-closed single-leg stance, vestibular-ocular reflex, visual motion sensitivity, the neck examination, and eyes-closed tandem stance. Abnormal findings were more frequent in female athletes for vestibular ocular reflex and visual motion sensitivity. The frequency of abnormal findings increased with age for vestibulo-ocular reflex, visual motion sensitivity, the neck examination, convergence testing, and eyes-open single-leg stance, whereas abnormalities decreased in frequency with age for eyes-open tandem stance and tandem gait. The frequency of abnormal findings generally decreased with time over the first 4 weeks following injury.

Discussion: A comprehensive physical examination is pivotal for evaluation of athletes with concussion. These findings highlight high-yield components of the concussion examination and support use of these examination components as injury markers. Future work should investigate associations between physical examination findings and postconcussion symptoms and recovery outcomes.

Classification of evidence: This retrospective cohort study provides Class IV evidence that neurologic examination with specifically designed clinical tests are helpful for diagnosis of traumatic brain injury in young athletes at age 6-24.

了解脑震荡恢复期的异常检查结果:回顾病历。
背景和目的:运动相关脑震荡(SRC)运动员的体格检查结果在文献中没有很好的描述。本研究旨在描述运动员脑震荡后第一个月的体格检查结果,重点关注性别、年龄和受伤后时间的影响:这是一项回顾性电子病历(EMR)审查,对2017年至2019年期间在多学科学术脑震荡门诊初诊的500名6-24岁患者的体格检查结果进行了审查,这些患者在SRC后15天内就诊。EMR 中内置的标准化脑震荡检查记录了所有患者的精神状态、颅神经、前庭眼球运动筛查和平衡检查结果。主要结果是伤后前 30 天内出现异常检查结果的频率,并使用混合逻辑回归模型根据性别、年龄和伤后时间对其进行进一步分析:结果:总体而言,最常见的异常检查结果是闭眼单腿站立、前庭-眼反射、视觉运动敏感度、颈部检查和闭眼双腿站立。女性运动员的前庭-眼反射和视觉运动敏感性的异常发现更为频繁。随着年龄的增长,前庭-眼反射、视觉运动敏感度、颈部检查、辐辏测试和睁眼单脚站立的异常发现频率会增加,而睁眼双脚站立和串联步态的异常发现频率会降低。在受伤后的最初 4 周内,异常发现的频率通常会随着时间的推移而降低:讨论:全面的体格检查是评估脑震荡运动员的关键。这些研究结果强调了脑震荡检查中的高产成分,并支持使用这些检查成分作为损伤标志物。未来的工作应研究体格检查结果与脑震荡后症状和恢复结果之间的关联:这项回顾性队列研究提供了 IV 级证据,证明神经系统检查和专门设计的临床测试有助于诊断 6-24 岁年轻运动员的脑外伤。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurology. Clinical practice
Neurology. Clinical practice CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
期刊介绍: Neurology® Genetics is an online open access journal publishing peer-reviewed reports in the field of neurogenetics. The journal publishes original articles in all areas of neurogenetics including rare and common genetic variations, genotype-phenotype correlations, outlier phenotypes as a result of mutations in known disease genes, and genetic variations with a putative link to diseases. Articles include studies reporting on genetic disease risk, pharmacogenomics, and results of gene-based clinical trials (viral, ASO, etc.). Genetically engineered model systems are not a primary focus of Neurology® Genetics, but studies using model systems for treatment trials, including well-powered studies reporting negative results, are welcome.
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