| Literature DB >> 25285728 |
Nick Reed1, James Murphy2, Talia Dick2, Katie Mah3, Melissa Paniccia3, Lee Verweel3, Danielle Dobney3, Michelle Keightley4.
Abstract
Concussion is one of the most commonly reported injuries amongst children and youth involved in sport participation. Following a concussion, youth can experience a range of short and long term neurobehavioral symptoms (somatic, cognitive and emotional/behavioral) that can have a significant impact on one's participation in daily activities and pursuits of interest (e.g., school, sports, work, family/social life, etc.). Despite this, there remains a paucity in clinically driven research aimed specifically at exploring concussion within the youth sport population, and more specifically, multi-modal approaches to measuring recovery. This article provides an overview of a novel and multi-modal approach to measuring recovery amongst youth athletes following concussion. The presented approach involves the use of both pre-injury/baseline testing and post-injury/follow-up testing to assess performance across a wide variety of domains (post-concussion symptoms, cognition, balance, strength, agility/motor skills and resting state heart rate variability). The goal of this research is to gain a more objective and accurate understanding of recovery following concussion in youth athletes (ages 10-18 years). Findings from this research can help to inform the development and use of improved approaches to concussion management and rehabilitation specific to the youth sport community.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25285728 PMCID: PMC4828144 DOI: 10.3791/51892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis Exp ISSN: 1940-087X Impact factor: 1.355