Gender differences in female and male Australian football concussion injury: A prospective observational study of emergency department presentations

Author:

Stella Julian1ORCID,Gill Stephen D12ORCID,Lowry Nicole1,Reade Tom1,Baker Tim3,Kloot Kate4ORCID,Hayden Georgina5,Ryan Matthew6,Seward Hugh7,Page Richard S2

Affiliation:

1. Emergency Department University Hospital Geelong Geelong Victoria Australia

2. Barwon Centre for Orthopaedic Research and Education (B‐CORE), School of Medicine Deakin University and St John of God Hospital Geelong Victoria Australia

3. Centre for Rural Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine Deakin University Warrnambool Victoria Australia

4. School of Medicine Deakin University Warrnambool Victoria Australia

5. St John of God Hospital Geelong Geelong Victoria Australia

6. Epworth Hospital Geelong Waurn Ponds Victoria Australia

7. Newtown Medical Centre Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo examine gender differences in Australian football (AF)‐related concussion presentations to EDs in regional Australia.MethodsA prospective observational study of patients presenting to 1 of the 10 EDs in Western Victoria, Australia, with an AF‐related concussion was conducted. Patients were part of a larger study investigating AF injuries over a complete AF season, including pre‐season training and practice matches. Information regarding concussion injuries was extracted from patient medical records, including clinical features, concurrent injuries, mechanism and context of injury. Female and male data were compared with chi‐squared and Fisher's exact tests. P < 0.05 was considered significant.ResultsFrom the original cohort of 1635 patients with AF‐related injuries (242 female and 1393 male), 231 (14.1%) patients were diagnosed with concussion. Thirty‐eight (15.7%) females had concussions versus 193 (13.9%) males (P > 0.05). Females over the age of 16 were more likely to be concussed than males in the same age range (females n = 26, 68.4% vs males n = 94, 48.7%; P = 0.026). Neurosurgically significant head injury was rare (one case). Similar rates of concurrent injury were found between females 15 (39.5%) and males 64 (33.2%), with neck injury the single most common in 24 (10.3%) concussions. Sixty‐nine patients (29%) were admitted for observation or to await the results of scans. The majority of concussions occurred in match play (87.9%). Females were more likely injured in contested ball situations (63.2% vs 37.3%; P < 0.05).ConclusionConcussion rates for community‐level AF presentations to regional EDs were similar between genders. Serious head injury was rare, although hospital admission for observation was common. Concurrent injuries were common, with associated neck injury most often identified. Match play accounted for the majority of head injuries.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference33 articles.

1. Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy: A Brief Overview

2. Epidemiology of Head Injuries Focusing on Concussions in Team Contact Sports: A Systematic Review

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5. Australian Football League.2019 Injury Report [Internet]. [Cited 17 Jun 2021]. Available from URL:https://resources.afl.com.au/afl/document/2019/12/04/125d0f05‐e879‐4fdd‐8851‐539abd27310e/2019‐AFLW‐Injury‐Report.pdf.

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