Concussion
AIS Guidelines
Concussion guidelines - AIS
Flowchart
SCAT6
SCAT6 – Sport Concussion Assessment Tool - Age > 13 years - 10/10 - Gold standard
ChildSCAT6 – Sport concussion Assessment Tool for children - Age <13 years - 10/10 - Gold standard
Return to Sport
Return to Sport Protocol - children 18 years of age and under -
Return to Learn Care Plan - Letter for school for extra breaks or postponing exams / assignments post concussion
Resources
Guidelines of Sports-Related concussion - AAFP - 7/10 - Useful
Concussion + Michael Collins on Youtube - Petter Attia - 8/10 - Really interesting
SCAT5 - BMJ - Outdated / now SCAT6
Child SCAT5 - BMJ - Outdated / now SCAT6
Head Injury Guidelines - RCH - 10/10 - Gold standard
Overview
Concussion is complex pathophysiological process affecting the brain due to biomechanical forces
Most concussions recover in 10 to 14 days
Mechanism
Brain is an egg yolk in an egg shell
Acceleration / deceleration = brain shifting in skull
Membranes stretch
Potassium leaks out of neuron
Increased demand glucose / energy to force potassium back into neuron
Calcium leaks into cells + vasoconstriction + decreased cerebral blood flow = decrease energy supply
Concussion is mismatch of demand for energy versus supply
Cells struggle to operate at normal levels
Cells don’t die, just inefficient
Different systems decompensate
Risk factors
History of car sickness = less force causes injury
Migraine history
Strabismus
Anxiety
Females > Male (have 6 x greater incidence car sickness + migraine)
High severity of acute and subacute concussive symptoms
a high number of concussive symptoms
prolonged loss of consciousness (longer than one minute)
post-concussive seizure
previous history of concussion
age of the athlete
female sex
history of depression, anxiety or migraine
Six types of concussion
Cognitive Fatigue
Vestibular - Central pathways
Ocular - Ocular motor
Migraine
Anxiety
Neck - Uncommon
Symptoms
About 21 symptoms post concussion at the time of event
Signs
LOC
Confusion
Balance
Vomitting
Symptoms
Dizzy (Best predicts longer recovery from concussion = 6 x more predictive of longer recovery > 1 month. Maybe because players play through the injury.)
Foggy (2nd best predictor)
Detached
Light sens
Noise sens
Blurred vision
Nausea
Fatigue
Headache
Amnesia
Study comparing those taken out of play immediately versus playing on
Taken out immediately = 18 days
Playing 15 minutes through event = 44 days
Every minute playing through injury might add 7 to 8 days to injury
Complications
Impaired performance
Acute progressive diffuse cerebral oedema
Prolonged symptoms
Depression
CTE
Management
Make a diagnosis
Differentiate other pathologies
Concussion modifiers
Symptoms - High number, longer duration, high severity
Signs - Prolonged LOC > 1min, amnesia
Sequelae - Prolonged concussive symptoms
Temporal - Frequency, repeated concussions, timing of injuries
Threshold - Repeated concussion with progressively less force
Age - Child and adolescent
Comorbid - Migraine, depression, mental health
Medication - Psychoactive, anticoagulants
Sports - High0risk activity, contact and collision sport
Diagnosis
SCAT
Return to sport
Any player with suspected or confirmed concussion is not to return to play that day
Not allowed to return to play until complete recovery
Comprehensive approach
Cognitive and physical rest
Physiological stress (Exercise, Flying, Altitude)
Cognitive loads (Work, Video games, Computer)
Monitoring post-concussive symptoms + signs
SCAT
Neuropyschiatric tests
Common deficits are reduced attention, ability to process information, slowed reaction time, impaired memory
Graduated return to activity with monitoring
Treatment for long-term post concussive symptoms
Sleep hygiene
Physical exercise
Vestibular training
Medications
SSRI, TCA