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Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing David Bernhardt, M.D. University of Wisconsin Sports Medicine

Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

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Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing. David Bernhardt, M.D. University of Wisconsin Sports Medicine. Concussion. Mild traumatic brain injury. Vienna Consensus Statement 2001. Dazed appearance Confusion Memory Loss Headache Dizziness Balance problems. Irritable - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Player Safety: Concussion &

Baseline Impact Testing

David Bernhardt, M.D.

University of Wisconsin Sports Medicine

Page 2: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Concussion

Mild traumatic brain injury

Vienna Consensus Statement 2001

Page 3: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Symptoms

• Dazed appearance

• Confusion• Memory Loss• Headache• Dizziness• Balance problems

• Irritable• Personality

change• Slowed response• Poor

focus/attention• +/- LOC

Page 4: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing
Page 5: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Memory

Page 6: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

What if the athlete suffers brief LOC?

• Should this athlete be DQ’d for the remainder of the game?

• Does LOC predict long term prognosis?

Page 7: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

What if the athlete suffers brief LOC?

• 383 MTBI patients (GCS 14-15)• Confusion, agitation, retrograde amnesia,

LOC• Poorer performance for all groups on

neuropsychological tests sensitive to MTBI

• No differences between groups based on LOC, uncertain LOC and no LOC

Lovell MR, et al. Clin J Sports Med 1999

Page 8: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Simple Concussion

• Resolves without complication in 7-10 days

• Rest until all symptoms have resolved

• Graded return to play

Page 9: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Complex Concussion

• Persistent symptoms• Specific sequelae (seizures)• Prolonged LOC (> 1 minute)• Prolonged cognitive impairment• Repeated concussions with less force

• Consider neuropsychological testing• Multidisciplinary approach

Page 10: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Sideline evaluation

Orientation ConcentrationMonth: ___________________ 0 1 Digits backward (If correct, go to Date: _____________________ 0 1 next string length. If incorrect, read Day of week: ______________ 0 1 trial 2. Stop if both incorrect.Year: ____________________ 0 1 4-9-3 6-2-9 ______0 1Time (within 1 hour): _______ 0 1 3-8-1-4 3-2-7-9 _____0 1

6-2-9-7-1 1-5-2-8-6 ______0 1Orientation Total Score _________ / 5 7-1-8-4-6-2 5-9-1-4-8 _____0 1

Months in reverse order: (entire sequence correct for 1 pt)

DecJan 0 1

Concentration Total Score ____ / 5

Page 11: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Sideline evaluationImmediate Memory: (all 3 trials are complete regardless of score on trial 1 & 2; total score equals sum across all

3 trials)

List Trial 1 Trial 2 Trial 3Word 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 Exertional maneuversWord 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 CoordinationWord 3 0 1 0 1 0 1 StrengthWord 4 0 1 0 1 0 1 SensationWord 5 0 1 0 1 0 1 Recall of injuryTotalImmediate Memory Total Score _____ / 15

Delayed recall

Word 1 0 1Word 2 0 1Word 3 0 1Word 4 0 1Word 5 0 1Delayed Recall Total Score _____/5 McCrea M et al. Summary of Total Scores _____ / 30 Neurology 1997

Page 12: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Serial 7’s

• 522 high school athletes, PPPE• Serial 7, serial 3, months in reverse• Seven consecutive or 11 with one

mistake• 51% serial 7’s, 79% serial 3’s• 89% months in reverse

Young CC, Jacobs BA et al. Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine 1997

Page 13: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

DO NOT ALLOW RETURN TO PLAY

UNTIL COMPLETELY ASYMPTOMATIC

Page 14: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

If You Do Not Know Athlete’s Baseline Neuropsychological Status, It Is Difficult To Judge

Normal

Page 15: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

High school athletes often require a significantly longer period of time to become asymptomatic and for their cognitive function to return to normal than both collegiate and professional athletes

Page 16: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Catastrophic complications

• Epidural

• Subdural

• Second impact syndrome

Page 17: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Second impact syndrome

• Not fully recovered from previous head injury when sustain a second head injury

• Loss of vascular autoregulation• Cerebral vascular congestion• Malignant brain edema, brainstem

herniation, death

Page 18: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

POST CONCUSSIVE SYNDROME

Recurrent headaches DizzinessMemory impairment DepressionLoss of libido TinnitusAtaxia AnxietyAlcohol intolerance PhotophobiaHyperacousis Concentration

Page 19: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Post concussive syndrome

• Not necessarily related to severity of concussion

• Attention and learning difficulty may be subtle

• Cumulative effects of multiple concussions

Page 20: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Neuropsychological testing

• Nature and degree of deficit acutely

• Relationship to standard sideline evaluation

• Recovery curves

Page 21: Player Safety: Concussion & Baseline Impact Testing

Computerized Neurocognitive Testing

• IMPACT• Headminders• Cogsport

• http://www.wiyouthsoccer.com/impact.html