Specific Factors Influence Postconcussion Symptom Duration among Youth Referred to a Sports Concussion Clinic - 24/06/16
, Caroline E. Schaffer, BS 3, Sean C. Rose, MD 1, 2, Julie A. Young, ATC 4, Kelly A. McNally, PhD 5, 6, Anastasia N. Fischer, MD 4Abstract |
Objective |
To identify the clinical factors that influence the duration of postconcussion symptoms among youth referred to a sports concussion clinic.
Study design |
A retrospective cohort study was conducted to evaluate several potential predictors of symptom duration via a Cox proportional hazards analyses. The individual postconcussion symptom scores were highly correlated, so these symptoms were analyzed in the statistical model as coefficients derived from principal component analyses.
Results |
Among 1953 youth with concussion, 1755 (89.9%) had dates of reported symptom resolution. The remainder (10.1%) were lost to follow-up and censored. The median time to recovery was 18 days (range 1-353 days). By 30 days, 72.6% had recovered; by 60 days, 91.4% had recovered; and by 90 days, 96.8% had recovered. Several variables in a multivariate Cox model predicted postconcussion symptom duration: female sex (P < .001, hazard ratio [HR] = 1.28), continued activity participation (P = .02, HR = 1.13), loss of consciousness (P = .03, HR = 1.18), anterograde amnesia (P = .04, HR = 1.15), premorbid headaches (P = .03, HR = 1.15), symptom components from the day of concussion (emotion, P = .03, HR = 1.08), and the day of clinic evaluation (cognitive-fatigue, P < .001, HR = 1.22; cephalalgic, P < .001, HR = 1.27; emotional, P = .05, HR = 1.08; arousal-stimulation, P = .003, HR = 1.1). In univariate analyses, greater symptom scores generally predicted longer symptom durations. Worsening of symptoms from the day of concussion to the day of clinic evaluation also predicted longer recovery (P < .001, HR = 1.59).
Conclusions |
Several factors help to predict protracted postconcussion symptom durations among youth referred to a sports concussion clinic.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : traumatic brain injury, TBI, mTBI, pediatric, adolescent
Abbreviations : HR, LOC, PCA
Plan
| The authors declare no conflicts of interest. |
Vol 174
P. 33 - juillet 2016 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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