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Clinical recovery of amateur athletes who present to the emergency department within one-week following sport-related concussion: a one-year prospective, matched-cohort study
Author(s)
Date Issued
2021
Date Available
2022-05-05T15:11:40Z
Abstract
Sport-related concussion is a major public health burden due to its concerning prevalence and possible negative, long-term consequences on brain health. However, approximately 85% of athletes recover within two weeks following sport-related concussion when assessed using self-reported symptoms, computerised neurocognitive testing, and clinician-administered static balance performance. This is a relatively consistent finding across existing studies, and across the spectrum of sex, age, sport, and level of play. Despite the acute clinical recovery experienced by most athletes following sport-related concussion, a notable minority experience a prolonged recovery that is characterised by persistent symptoms, adverse health related quality-of-life, and delayed return-to-sporting activity. Sport-related concussion typically induces a variety of impairments that involve many body systems. The complex array of somatic, cognitive, vestibular, oculomotor, autonomic, sensorimotor, and psychological impairments that can manifest following sport-related concussion underscores the need for many outcome measures to longitudinally identify concussion-associated impairments. In the absence of a comprehensive and longitudinal assessment incorporating many outcome measures, concussion-associated impairments may go unidentified. The clinical time-course of concussion recovery beyond three months and up to one-year after injury remains relatively under-investigated in the concussion literature. Consequently, it is unclear whether athletes experience impaired, or fluctuating, outcomes in the year following sport-related concussion that may contribute towards adverse brain health in later-life. Patient-, clinician-, and laboratory-based outcome measures assess different constructs with varying granularity and, when assessed simultaneously, enable a more holistic understanding of the wide spectrum of patient health and disability that a patient may experience after injury. To this end, we assessed patient-, clinician-, and laboratory-based outcomes within a clinical outcomes assessment framework to prospectively investigate the one-year recovery of athletes who presented to a university-affiliated hospital emergency department within one-week following sport-related concussion.
Type of Material
Doctoral Thesis
Publisher
University College Dublin. School of Public Health, Physiotherapy and Sports Science
Qualification Name
Ph.D.
Copyright (Published Version)
2021 the Author
Subjects
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
5790731.pdf
Size
7.57 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
ae7f8d441dc051d8a329e247cdb4662b
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