| Literature DB >> 36231582 |
Michael McLarnon1, Stephen H Boyce2,3, Neil Fisher4,5, Neil Heron5,6,7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Downhill mountain biking (DHI) is a form of cycling and does not currently have a specific sports-related concussion (SRC) assessment.Entities:
Keywords: concussion; consensus meeting; downhill mountain bike (DMB); head trauma assessment; sports-related concussion
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36231582 PMCID: PMC9566347 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191912281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Prisma Flow Diagram.
Characteristics of Included Studies.
| Author, Year | Study Title | Type of Study | Sport | Amateur/ | Concussion | Concussion | Continued to Participate? | Recommendations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kronisch, 1994 [ | Traumatic Injuries in Off-Road Cycling | Retrospective, cross-sectional survey | Cross-country, downhill and dual slalom mountain biking | Amateur | 5.6% (3/54) | - | - | - | - |
| Kronisch, 1996 [ | Acute Injuries in Off-Road Bicycle Racinig | Descriptive, prospective | Off-road/downhill mountain biking | Professional | 25% (4/16) of those injured overall (3624) | - | - | - | 5/834 specific to downhill injured overall. |
| Kronisch et al., 1996 [ | Acute Injuries in Cross-Country and Downhill Off-Road Bicycle Racing | Retrospective Analysis | Downhill mountain biking | Professional | 9% (1/11) | No | - | None | - |
| Becker et al., 2013 [ | A Prospective Study of Downhill Mountain Biking Injuries | Prospective survey | Downhill mountain biking | Amateur and Professional | 5% (23/494) | - | 2 cyclists with concussion | Improved protective equipment and safer downhill trails | Higher injury rates among professionals |
| Clark et al., 2021 [ | Do Mountain Bikers Know When They Have Had a Concussion and, Do They Know to Stop Riding? | Retrospective Survey | Downhill mountain biking | Professional | 6.9% (15/219) diagnosed | SCAT 5 via anonymous survey post-competition | 67.5% Yes | Event organizers should implement mandatory sideline concussion protocols & encourage mountain bike advocacy groups to develop concussion sensitization programs that will educate riders | 1/3 did not recognise concussion |
| Willick et al., 2021 [ | The National Interscholastic Cycling Association Mountain Biking Injury Surveillance System: 40,000 Student-Athlete-Years of Data | Prospective study | Downhill mountain biking | Amateur (Student Athlete) | 23.6% | Not documented | Not documented- 71.3% of all injuries were unable to continue (not only head injury) | None- alluded to ≥4 weeks exclusion for confirmed concussion | 55.5% of all injuries occurred while riding downhill |
Six texts were ultimately included, all discussing SRC in downhill mountain biking. Three included studies reported information regarding the incidence of concussion in downhill cycling, including one (Clark et al., 2021) [34] noting that the diagnosis is often missed and is more common in sponsored athletes. None provided any information on a ‘sideline’ assessment for concussion or recommendations for return to play. Three were professional competitors, two were amateur cyclists, and one involved both.
Figure 2Ride-DHI 1.
Figure 3RIDE-DMB 2 and 3.
Return to Riding guidelines, adapted from the Fifth International Conference on Concussion in Sport.
| Stage | Aim | Activity | Goal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial Rest Period. Should Be Symptom-Free and Have Returned to School/Work/University Activities before Progressing to Stage 1. | |||
| 1 | Symptom-limited activity | Daily non-symptom-provoking activities | Gradual reintroduction of work/school activities |
| 2 | Light aerobic exercise | <15 min of duration. Walking or stationary cycling at a slow to medium pace. No resistance training. | Increase heart rate. Heart rate to be less than 70% of maximum. |
| 3 | Sport-specific exercise | Less than 45 min in duration. Cycling drills on smooth terrain. | Add movement. Heart rate to be less than 80% of maximum. |
| 4 | Non-contact training drills | Less than 60 min in duration. Harder training drills, e.g., introduce downhill terrain at submaximal effort or obstacle courses/sharp turns on smooth terrain. Begin progressive resistance training. | Exercise, co-ordination and increased thinking. Heart rate to be less than 90% of maximum. |
| 5 | Full contact practice | Following medical clearance, participate in normal training activity | Restore confidence and assess functional skills by coaching staff. |
| 6 | Return to sport | Normal mountain bike training and competition. | |