| Literature DB >> 29660949 |
Jon L Pertab1, Tricia L Merkley2, Alex J Cramond3, Kelly Cramond3,4, Holly Paxton5, Trevor Wu5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent evidence suggests that autonomic nervous dysfunction may be one of many potential factors contributing to persisting post-concussion symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Concussion; autonomic dysfunction; mild traumatic brain injury; orthostatic intolerance; post-concussion syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29660949 PMCID: PMC6027940 DOI: 10.3233/NRE-172298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NeuroRehabilitation ISSN: 1053-8135 Impact factor: 2.138
Indexing terms employed in the final search
| Concussion headings | Autonomic nervous system headings |
| Brain injuries | Autonomic nervous system |
| Brain concussion | Autonomic nervous system diseases |
| Postconcussion syndrome | Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome |
| Hypotension, orthostatic | |
| Hemodynamics | |
| Baroreflex | |
| Blood flow velocity | |
| Syncope | |
| Head Injury | Autonomic nervous system |
| Brain Injury | Autonomic dysfunction |
| Brain concussion | Orthostatic intolerance |
| Postconcussion syndrome | Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome |
| Traumatic brain injury | |
| Concussion | Autoregulation |
| Brain Concussion | Cardiovascular autoregulation |
| ECG abnormality | |
| Heart Rate | |
| Heart rate variability | |
| Brain Concussion | Autonomic nervous system |
| Traumatic brain injury | Sympathetic nervous system |
| Parasympathetic nervous system | |
| Syncope | |
| Heart rate | |
| Concussion | Autonomic |
| Postconcussion syndrome | Autonomic control |
| Mild traumatic brain injury | Autonomic dysfunction |
| Concussion symptoms | Autoregulation |
| Minor head-injury | Sympathetic dysregulation |
| Electrocardiogram | |
| Orthostatic | |
| Postural tachycardia syndrome | |
| Baroreflex | |
| Baroreflex sensitivity | |
| Heart rate variability | |
| QT interval variability |
Fig.1Flow diagram documenting disposition of articles during the systematic review.
Methodological quality of studies with control groups examining ANS functioning after concussion – American Academy of Neurology, 2011 & 2015 rating criteria
| Population First Author (year) | Class 1 Requirements | Downgrades | AAN Class | ||||||||
| Prospective data collection | a) Confounds accounted for or equivalent | b) Outcome is objective or blind evaluation. | c) ANS Outcome clearly defined | d) Inclusion-exclusion criteria defined | e) Dropouts <20% and accounted for | Retrospective data, meets a-e (class 2) | Cohort or case control with a-b* (class 3) | Adequate definition of concussion (or class 4) | Adequate statistical analysis (or class 4) | ||
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AAN = American Academy of Neurology; ANS = autonomic nervous system; n/a = not applicable; = criterion not met; = criterion met; * - confounds may be described not necessarily equivalent or accounted for in class 3 studies; ** = criterion met only at first evaluation point, not at follow-up points; ∧= retrieved in 2016 advance online publication.
Summary of case studies and case series examining ANS functioning after concussion
| First Author (year) Location | Sample description, age in years, (concussion criteria) | ANS evaluation method | Evaluation period post injury | Main Findings related to ANS functioning |
| Heart rate variability analysis at rest | Repeated measurements at 2,6, and 10 days post injury | Identified abnormal autonomic control of sino-atrial pacing and cardiac conduction that trended toward normal over time. | ||
| Heart rate variability analysis at rest | Repeated evaluations weekly for 10 weeks beginning at 3.5 months post injury | Following 10 weeks of biofeedback treatment, heart rate variability measures demonstrated improvement. | ||
| Response of blood pressure and heart rate to Valsalva maneuver | Unclear – at least three weeks post | Sympathetic dysfunction with absence of late, phase II rise in blood pressure with Valsalva, suggesting altered vascular tone and heart rate response compared with normal controls | ||
| Flow velocity from middle cerebral artery using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography in response to medication induced blood pressure increase | 6 days post-injury | Velocity in the middle cerebral arteries exhibited a completely pressure-passive response with the pharmacologically induced mean arterial blood pressure increase – indicating an absence of cerebral autoregulation. This was reconfirmed postoperatively in the awake patient. | ||
| Head upright tilt table testing including heart rate, blood pressure, ECG, | Between 21 days and 6 months for initial testing. | 70.6% of the sample had abnormal tilt test results – 29.5% with isolated syncope and 41.2% with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, 29.5% normal. | ||
| 24 hour ambulatory EEG for heart rate variability analysis | Between 3 months and five years | Evidence of autonomic nervous system dysfunction was apparent with sympathetic nervous system hyperactivation. | ||
| N = 650, age not stated, NFL players with 887concussions reported, (criteria similar to ACRM) | Symptom report of syncope | During the period of recovery – all but one returned to play within 7 days | 13 of 887 (1.5%) players with concussion reported syncope during their recovery. | |
| Physician conducted clinical interview to identify syncopal and presyncopal symptoms | In two cases syncope occurred within 24 hours of injury, larger group time period not reported | Reports details of two cases where patients developed syncope after blast concussion. In a case series of 183, 1.1% developed syncope and others reported postural or exertional lightheadedness or dizziness. | ||
| 15 min heart rate variability measurement | Not stated | Low heart rate variability compare to norms was related to multiple variables with some unique variance accounted for by concussion. | ||
| Pupillary response to light flashes of varying intensity | Ranging from within first year to more than four years (not otherwise stated) | On average, photosensitive individuals with mTBI exhibited larger pupil diameters, more rapid redilation velocities, and more rapid recovery times. | ||
| Vavilala (2014) Washington, USA | Mean middle cerebral artery flow velocities as measured using transcranial Doppler as mean arterial pressure was increased | 3.5 (3.7) days | 17% of participants had impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation reactivity to medication induced arterial pressure changes relative to normative values. |
AAN = American Academy of Neurology; ANS = autonomic nervous system; ECG = electrocardiogram; IED = improvised explosive device.
Summary of controlled studies examining ANS functioning after concussion
| First Author (year) Location | Population (concussion criteria) | Concussed Sample, age in years | Control Sample, age in years | ANS evaluation methods | Time post-injury | Main findings |
| University football and volleyball (AAN and McRory 2009) | Heart rate variability at rest and during hand grip contraction exertion condition | 95 (63) days. | Concussion was associated with reduced high frequency power (more parasympathetic withdrawal) during exercise condition ( | |||
| Professional boxers (not stated) | Baroreflex functioning via middle cerebral artery perfusion changes during leg cuff deflation. | n/a current boxers all with repetitive trauma | Rate of baroreflex response to compensate for simulated orthostatic challenge was slower in boxers ( | |||
| College athletes (not stated) | Looked at heart rate at which exercise induced carotid murmur occurred | Not stated | Murmur in the control group occurred at 150 bpm and in the concussed group at 120 bpm ( | |||
| Ice hockey (Canadian Hockey Association Guideline) | Heart rate variability at rest, and during moderate and intense exercise bouts on stationary bicycle. | Evaluated at rest at 1.8 (0.2) days. First exercise test at 5.0 (1.4) days, repeated 5 days later. | No differences in heart rate variability measures at rest. Across both exercise bouts (when symptom free), the spectral power associated with parasympathetic and sympathetic regulation of heart rate was weaker in the concussed group by 33%. (low frequency | |||
| Ice hockey (Canadian Hockey Association Guideline) | Heart rate response to exercise bouts on a stationary bicycle. | 6.7 (1.8) days for missed time group; 2.0 (0.5) days for no missed time. Repeated 5 days later. | For the missed time group, rise in heart rate was significantly greater in the concussed group over the first 8 minutes of exercise than the control group – they displayed a greater rise in heart rate over time ( | |||
| University – multiple sports (similar to ACRM) | Heart rate variability – two seated 5 min intervals reported on. | In first week; after symptoms resolved; 1 week after clearance to return to play 34.7 (37.7) days. | Anomalies in heart rate variability measures in concussed athletes were noted at all three time points – primarily due to decreased parasympathetic activity ( | |||
| Athletes (not stated) | 5 min HRV analysis at rest followed by 3 min with isometric handgrip. | Within 48 hours and repeat at day 14. | No differences for heart rate variability or heart rate at either time point. Heart rate complexity was lower in the concussion group at 48 hours in handgrip condition ( | |||
| Athletes (not stated) | Evaluated vagal modulation of heart rate using a QT interval variability index (QTVI) | 48 hours post injury, and 1 and 2 weeks post initial visit | At 48 hours, the QTVI reflected greater impairment in the concussion group ( | |||
| Athletes (not stated) | Arterial pulse wave analysis 5 min during rest and one min during isometric handgrip test conditions. | 48 hours and again at one week post-injury. | The systolic slope of the arterial pulse wave was reduced in concussed athletes at both time points (greatest in hand grip at 48 hours, | |||
| University sports teams (similar to ACRM) | Heart rate variability – two seated 5 min intervals and one 5 min standing interval. | 1st week post injury, 4.7 (2.1) days; after symptoms resolved, 18.1 (7.9) days; 1 week after clearance to play 25.5 (8.2) days | Increased sympathetic and reduced parasympathetic involvement in heart rate variability across all time points while seated (max | |||
| Military personnel (ACRM) | Pupillary response to light flashes | 15–45 days post injury | Constriction latencies and velocities slower in mTBI, rate of redilation also slower (max | |||
| University students (ACRM) | a) Symptomatic group – | a) Symptomatic group – | Skin conductance, and heart rate response to simulated stressful condition in the form of aversive noise through headphones. | 1–15 years (modal 4–6 years) | Participants with concussion history had highest heart rates and skin conduction changes in response to stress condition. They also displayed cognitive vulnerability to stress (data for effect size calculation not reported). | |
| “patients” unclear source (WHO) | Heart rate variability analysis at supine rest and in first 60 seconds standing. | 20 (11) months post injury (range 5–43 months) | Concussed group had significantly less heart rate variability in both the supine ( | |||
| University TBI registry (WHO) | Eyeball pressure (EP) activates the oculocardiac reflex arch which enhances PNS tone. Evaluated heart rate variability with 2 min eyeball pressure. | 32 (24) months post injury (range 5–86 months) | EP resulted in increased shift of autonomic balance to parasympathetic increases as expected in the control group, but the opposite reaction, balance shift toward sympathetic increases in the concussed group. Differences on multiple measures (max | |||
| “Patients” unclear source (WHO) | Heart rate variability, continuous BP, respiration at rest and in response to Valsalva maneuver | 34 (29) months post injury (range 4 to 98 months) | Heart rate variability measures lower at rest in mTBI group (max | |||
| Emergency department (GCS 13–15 within 8 hrs) | Cerebral blood flow velocity response to induced rapid brief changes in arterial blood pressure (caused by leg cuff deflation) | Within 48 hours of injury | Auto-regulation response was impaired in 8 of the 29 patients with mTBI (outside the lowest response of controls; max | |||
| Emergency department (WHO) | 5 min resting heart rate variability analysis performed twice | First evaluation within two weeks, follow up week 6 and 12 | Reduced heart rate variability measures in mTBI group at all time points. At first time point max | |||
| University students (Head injury with altered state of consciousness) | Electrodermal activity as a measure of sympathetic arousal in response to cognitive challenge. | not stated | Participants with mTBI had lower arousal when preparing to make a decision – interpreted as diminished physiological responses in mTBI group – but most comparisons were not significant. | |||
| Emergency department (GCS 15) | Heart rate variability, 5 min at rest | Immediately after admission | No significant differences between GCS15 and controls for LF, HF, and LF/HF | |||
| Emergency department (GCS13-15 with normal scan) | 5 min resting heart rate variability analysis performed twice | Within first week, follow up at 1.5, 3, 6, 12, and 18 months post injury | At initial evaluation lower HRV in concussion (max | |||
| Emergency department (GCS13-15 with normal scan) | Heart rate variability, 5 min at rest | Baseline within two weeks but referred to as “1st week”; follow up at 6th week | Reduced heart rate variability in mTBI group at time 1 (max | |||
| Community (ACRM) | Pupillary response to flashes of light in the context of hypoxic physical stressor | 3.1 (2.7) years | No differences in pupillary response were found between groups | |||
| Vision rehabilitation center (not stated) | Pupillary response to light flashes | Greater than one year | Overall findings suggest intact parasympathetic response but abnormal sympathetic pupillary control system (max | |||
| Vision rehabilitation center (not stated) | Pupillary response to light flashes of varying intensity | >45 days post injury | In concussion group longer constriction latency, slower velocities, and smaller pupil diameters at baseline were noted. Anomalies in parasympathetic and sympathetic pupillary response parameters were identified (max | |||
| Vision rehabilitation center (not stated) | a) Baseline static diameter of pupil prior to light pulse, b) amplitude of change in pupillary diameter in response to light pulses | >45 days post injury | No differences in static or dynamic pupillary responses were found between groups. | |||
ACRM = American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine; AAN = American Academy of Neurology; ANS = autonomic nervous system; ECG = electrocardiogram; GCS = Glasgow Coma Score; IED = improvised explosive device; mTBI = mild traumatic brain injury; WHO = World Health Organization.