1. Symptom Provocation During Aerobic and Dynamic Supervised Exercise Challenges in Adolescents With Sport-Related Concussion
- Author
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Michael Popovich, Matthew T. Lorincz, Bara Alsalaheen, Andrew Sas, Andrea Almeida, James T. Eckner, and Jeremiah Freeman
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Concussion ,Poison control ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Context (language use) ,030229 sport sciences ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Suicide prevention ,Asymptomatic ,Occupational safety and health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury prevention ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,Aerobic exercise ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Context Supervised exercise challenges (SECs) have been shown to be safe and beneficial in the early symptomatic period after concussion. Thus far, most in-clinic SECs studied have included a form of basic aerobic exercise only. An SEC that also includes dynamic forms of exercise mimics all steps of a standard return-to-play progression and may enhance the detection of concussion symptoms to guide in-clinic management decisions. Objective To determine whether an SEC that includes a dynamic SEC (DSEC) uncovered symptoms that would not have been identified by an SEC involving an aerobic SEC (ASEC) alone in adolescent patients with sport-related concussion. Design Retrospective case series. Setting Multidisciplinary sport concussion clinic at a tertiary care center. Patients or Other Participants A total of 65 adolescent athletes (mean age = 14.9 ± 2.0 years, 72.3% males) who underwent an in-clinic SEC within 30 days of concussion. Main Outcome Measure(s) Presence of pre-exercise symptoms and symptom provocation during the SEC were recorded, with exercise-provoked symptoms categorized as occurring during ASEC or DSEC. Results Of the total patient sample, 69.2% (n = 45/65) experienced symptom provocation at some point during the SEC. Symptoms were provoked in 20 patients during the ASEC, whereas 25 completed the ASEC without symptom provocation before becoming symptomatic during the subsequent DSEC and 20 completed the SEC without any symptom provocation. Of the 65 patients in the total sample, 46 were asymptomatic immediately before the SEC. Of these previously asymptomatic patients, 23.9% (n = 11/46) experienced symptom provocation during the ASEC, and an additional 37.0% (n = 17/46) remained asymptomatic during the ASEC but then developed symptoms during the DSEC. Conclusions The ASEC alone may not detect symptom provocation in a significant proportion of concussion patients who otherwise would develop symptoms during a DSEC.
- Published
- 2021