The effect of repeated concussions on clinical and neurocognitive symptom severity in different contact sports

Author:

Glaser Jennifer1,Jaeckle Sarah2,Beblo Thomas3,Mueller Gerhard2,Eidenmueller Andreas M.2,Schulz Philipp3,Schmehl Ingo4,Rogge Witold4,Hollander Karsten5ORCID,Toepper Max3ORCID,Gonschorek Andreas S.1

Affiliation:

1. Concussion Center Hamburg, Neurozentrum BG Klinikum Hamburg Hamburg Germany

2. Concussion Center Würzburg Praxis für Sport‐Neuropsychologie Würzburg Wuerzburg Germany

3. Evangelisches Klinikum Bethel gGmbH, University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Bielefeld University Bielefeld Germany

4. Concussion Center Berlin Klinik für Neurologie, BG Klinikum Unfallkrankenhaus Berlin GmbH Berlin Germany

5. Institute of Interdisciplinary Exercise Science and Sports Medicine, MSH Medical School Hamburg Hamburg Germany

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThe potential consequences of repeated concussions in sport are well documented. However, it remains unclear whether the cumulative impact of sports‐related concussions differs between different contact sports. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to investigate the cumulative effects of sports‐related concussions on clinical and neurocognitive health in different contact sports.Materials and MethodsIn a prospective multicenter study, we examined 507 (74 females) active professional athletes between 18 and 40 years of age from five different contact sports (soccer, handball, American football, basketball, and ice hockey). Data collection involved concussion history, clinical symptom evaluation, neurocognitive assessment, and the collection of other sports‐related information. Composite scores were built for clinical symptoms (such as neck pain and balance disturbances) and for neurocognitive symptoms (such as memory and attention impairments).ResultsAthletes having suffered 3+ concussions in the past showed disproportionally higher clinical symptom severity than athletes with less than three concussions across all sports. The level of clinical symptom burden in athletes with 3+ concussions indicated mild impairment. The number of past concussions did not affect neurocognitive performance.DiscussionRepeated sports‐related concussions appear to have a cumulative impact on clinical—but not cognitive—symptom severity. Although clinical symptom burden in athletes with 3+ concussions in the past was not alarmingly high yet in our sample, increased caution should be advised at this point. Despite few exceptions, results are similar for different contact sports, suggesting a similar multidisciplinary concussion management across all types of sport.

Publisher

Wiley

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