Literature DB >> 27479704

Phasic Electrodermal Activity During the Standardized Assessment of Concussion (SAC).

Adam C Raikes1, Sydney Y Schaefer2.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: The long-term effects of concussion on brain function during cognitive tasks are not fully understood and neuroimaging findings are equivocal. Some images show hyperactivation of prefrontal brain regions in previously concussed individuals relative to controls, suggesting increased cognitive resource allocation. Others show prefrontal hypoactivation and hyperactivation in other regions as a presumed compensatory mechanism. Given the relationship between sympathetic arousal and neural activation, physiologic measures of arousal, such as electrodermal activity, may provide additional insight into the brain's functional changes in those with a history of concussion.
OBJECTIVE: To quantify differences in electrodermal activity during a commonly used standardized neurocognitive assessment between individuals with or without a history of concussion.
DESIGN: Descriptive laboratory study.
SETTING: Research laboratory. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: Seven asymptomatic individuals with a self-reported history of physician-diagnosed, sport-related concussion (number of previous concussions = 1.43 ± 0.53; time since most recent concussion = 0.75 to 6 years, median = 3 years) and 10 individuals without a history of concussion participated in this study. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): All participants wore bilateral wrist electrodermal activity sensors during the Standardized Assessment of Concussion. We measured normalized phasic (reactive) electrodermal activity during each test element (orientation, immediate recall, concentration, delayed recall).
RESULTS: A significant group-by-test element interaction was present (P = .003). Individuals with a history of concussion had greater phasic activity during delayed recall (P < .001). Delayed-recall phasic activity was greater in both groups relative to the other elements.
CONCLUSIONS: Delayed recall resulted in greater physiologic arousal in previously concussed individuals relative to healthy control participants, supporting previous neuroimaging findings of increased prefrontal cortex activity during memory tasks after concussion. Given similar task performance and arousal patterns across the test, our results suggest that previously concussed individuals incur additional cognitive demands in a short-delay recall task.

Entities:  

Keywords:  memory; traumatic brain injuries; wireless technology

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27479704      PMCID: PMC5317189          DOI: 10.4085/1062-6050-51.8.09

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Athl Train        ISSN: 1062-6050            Impact factor:   2.860


  28 in total

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Review 5.  Neural mechanisms of autonomic, affective, and cognitive integration.

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7.  Psychometric and measurement properties of concussion assessment tools in youth sports.

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Journal:  J Athl Train       Date:  2006 Oct-Dec       Impact factor: 2.860

8.  Standardized assessment of concussion (SAC): on-site mental status evaluation of the athlete.

Authors:  M McCrea; J P Kelly; C Randolph; J Kluge; E Bartolic; G Finn; B Baxter
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9.  Lateralization in the electrodermal system as a function of cognitive/hemispheric manipulations.

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10.  Enhanced sympathetic arousal in response to FMRI scanning correlates with task induced activations and deactivations.

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