Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee WI
2. UBMD Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine; SUNY Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences; Buffalo, NY
3. Department of Kinesiology, School of Public Health-Bloomington, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
Assessments of oculomotor, balance, and exercise function detect different responses to mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in sport-related mTBI. These assessments are understudied in the adult community mTBI population. We evaluated level 1 trauma center patients with non-sports related mTBI on oculomotor functioning (near point of convergence [NPC] and accommodation [NPA]), balance (Balance Error Scoring System [BESS]), and exercise tolerance (Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test [BCTT]).
Methods
A prospective, cohort study of adults with mTBI (N = 36) were assessed at 1 week and (N = 26) 1 month post-mTBI using NPC, NPA, BESS, BCTT, and the Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire [RPQ]. Prevalence of test impairment and association between performance and mTBI-related symptom burden (RPQ scores) were characterized.
Results
Participants demonstrated varying levels of impairment (e.g., 33.3% oculomotor, 44.1% balance, and 55.6% exercise impairment at 1 week). Participants displayed diverse impairment profiles across assessments. We observed medium-to-large correlations between poorer NPC and BCTT performance and greater mTBI symptom burden.
Conclusions
Clinical examinations of oculomotor function, balance, and exercise adopted from sport-related concussion assessments detect impairment in adult community members with mTBI. While findings warrant larger-scale replication, they imply that incorporating these simple, structured exams into the assessment of mTBI may facilitate more personalized management strategies.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference25 articles.
1. Traumatic brain injury-related emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths—United States, 2007 and 2013;MMWR Surveill Summ,2017
2. Active rehabilitation of concussion and post-concussion syndrome;Phys Med Rehabil Clin N Am,2016
3. Symptom frequency and persistence in the first year after traumatic brain injury: a TRACK-TBI study;J Neurotrauma,2022
4. Post-concussion symptoms and disability in adults with mild traumatic brain injury: a systematic review and meta-analysis;J Neurotrauma,2023
5. Discordance between documented criteria and documented diagnosis of traumatic brain injury in the emergency department;J Neurotrauma,2019