| Literature DB >> 31781021 |
Johna K Register-Mihalik1,2, Kevin M Guskiewicz1, Stephen W Marshall1,2,3, Karen L McCulloch4, Jason P Mihalik1, Martin Mrazik5,6, Ian Murphy7, Dhiren Naidu5,6, Shabbar I Ranapurwala2,3, Kathryn Schneider8,9,10, Paula Gildner2, Michael McCrea11.
Abstract
Background: Sports-related concussion (SRC) is a complex injury with heterogeneous presentation and management. There are few studies that provide guidance on the most effective and feasible strategies for recovery and return to sports participation. Furthermore, there have been no randomized studies of the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of early rehabilitation strategies across multiple sports and age groups. This international cluster-randomized pragmatic trial evaluates the effectiveness of early multi-dimensional rehabilitation integrated with the current return to sport strategy vs. the current return to sport strategy alone.Entities:
Keywords: clinical intervention; exercise; post-concussion activity; return to play; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2019 PMID: 31781021 PMCID: PMC6856221 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.01176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
5th International Consensus Statement on concussion in sport return to sport strategy.
| Daily activities that do not provoke symptoms | Gradual reintroduction of work/school activities | |
| Walking or stationary cycling at slow to medium pace. No resistance training | Increase HR | |
| Skating drills in ice hockey, running drills in soccer. No head impact activities. | Add movement | |
| Progression to more complex training drills (e.g., passing drills in football and ice hockey). May start progressive resistance training | Exercise, coordination, and increased thinking | |
| Following medical clearance, participate in normal training activities | Restore confidence and assess functional skills by coaching staff | |
| Normal game play | ||
From McCrory et al. (.
Figure 1Key study activities by study arm.
Figure 2Multidimensional Rehabilitation (MDR) framework and progression.
Figure 3Symptom presentation and activity bucket matches for the Multidimensional Rehabilitation (MDR) progression.
Multidimensional rehabilitation progression (Active Rehab).
∘ Symptom score not increasing by 10 or more over a 24 h/1 day period from their initial symptom assessment (6 h or 24–48 h assessment) ▪ Most people will be eligible at this time ▪ The earliest someone could start the intervention would be 24–48 h post-injury | Stabilization of symptoms | |
∘ An individual's symptoms must ∘ They must not have any individual symptom items with a severity score of | Symptom control and introduction to the intervention | |
∘ An individual's total symptom severity score does ∘ No individual symptom item severity score symptom score at the beginning of the subsequent intervention session is a | Phase II- Perceived Impairment reduction Phase III- Activity integration Phase IV- Recovery acceleration Phase V- Sport specific application | |
| Migraine headaches Sleep related conditions/symptoms Gross vestibular dysfunction | ||
| Documentation of all additional care and treatment should be completed including but not limited to: | ||
| Medications Additional therapies (e.g., physical therapy, vision therapy, vestibular therapy, etc.) All referral sources and those involved in the individual's care | ||
| Return to full participation will occur at the physician/site medical professional's discretion of patient full recovery and will be documented. The intervention progression will stop. | ||
Figure 4Example illustration of Multidimensional Rehabilitation (MDR) activities being integrated to the Enhanced Graded Exertion (EGE) progression. This figure illustrates the overlap in activities. MDR activity may be integrated as soon as the participant is asymptomatic.
Figure 5Example Balance Activity Progression through the Multidimensional Rehabilitation (MDR) framework. Written informed consent was provided by all individuals in the images for publication.
Assessment schedule.
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- Symptoms and activity assessed daily from the first assessment point until 7 days post return to play - Concussion Index completed following injury - Recovery Form completed following return to play - | |||||||||||
QOL, Quality of Life; BSI-18, Brief Symptom Inventory 18 item; SAC, Standardized Assessment of Concussion; NPC, Near Point of Convergence; SCAT, Sport Concussion Assessment Tool.
Figure 6Balance Error Scoring System (BESS) stances. Written informed consent was provided by the individual in the image for publication. (A) Double leg firm, (B) single leg firm, (C) tandem stance firm, (C) double leg foam, (E) single leg foam, and (F) tandem stance foam (29).
Figure 7Dual-task schematic. (A) Memory task begins, (B) walking task, and (C) memory recall.
Power and effect size based on number of participants in each arm.
| 100 | 95% | 83% | 60% | 36% | 18% |
| 150 | >99% | 94% | 78% | 50% | 24% |
| 200 | >99% | 98% | 88% | 62% | 30% |
| 250 | >99% | >99% | 94% | 72% | 37% |