Age Differences in Recovery After Sport-Related Concussion: A Comparison of High School and Collegiate Athletes

Author:

Nelson Lindsay D.1,Guskiewicz Kevin M.2,Barr William B.3,Hammeke Thomas A.1,Randolph Christopher4,Ahn Kwang Woo1,Wang Yanzhi5,McCrea Michael A.1

Affiliation:

1. Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee;

2. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill;

3. New York University School of Medicine, NY;

4. Loyola University Medical Center, Chicago, IL;

5. College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Peoria

Abstract

 Younger age has been hypothesized to be a risk factor for prolonged recovery after sport-related concussion, yet few studies have directly evaluated age differences in acute recovery.Context:  To compare clinical recovery patterns for high school and collegiate athletes.Objective:  Prospective cohort study.Design:  Large, multicenter prospective sample collected from 1999–2003 in a sports medicine setting.Setting:  Concussed athletes (n = 621; 545 males and 76 females) and uninjured controls (n = 150) participating in high school and collegiate contact and collision sports (79% in football, 15.7% in soccer, and the remainder in lacrosse or ice hockey).Subjects:  Participants underwent evaluation of symptoms (Graded Symptom Checklist), cognition (Standardized Assessment of Concussion, paper-and-pencil neuropsychological tests), and postural stability (Balance Error Scoring System). Athletes were evaluated preinjury and followed serially at several time points after concussive injury: immediately, 3 hours postinjury, and at days 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, and 45 or 90 (with neuropsychological measures administered at baseline and 3 postinjury time points).Main Outcome Measure(s):  Comparisons of concussed high school and collegiate athletes with uninjured controls suggested that high school athletes took 1 to 2 days longer to recover on a cognitive (Standardized Assessment of Concussion) measure. Comparisons with the control group on other measures (symptoms, balance) as well as direct comparisons between concussed high school and collegiate samples revealed no differences in the recovery courses between the high school and collegiate groups on any measure. Group-level recovery occurred at or before 7 days postinjury on all assessment metrics.Results:  The findings suggest no clinically significant age differences exist in recovery after sport-related concussion, and therefore, separate injury-management protocols are not needed for high school and collegiate athletes.Conclusions:

Publisher

Journal of Athletic Training/NATA

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,General Medicine

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