4.1 Article

Early psychological symptoms predict concussion recovery time in middle and high school athletes

Journal

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/13803395.2022.2118676

Keywords

Mild traumatic brain injury; concussion; athlete; postconcussive symptoms; psychological screening; sports-related neuropsychology

Funding

  1. Texas Institute of Brain Injury and Repair (TIBIR)
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [UL1TR001105]

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This study explores the predictive role of post-concussion mood and sleep symptoms on recovery time in adolescent athletes. The results show that concussion symptoms and sleep quality are associated with recovery, and there are differences in symptom presentation between genders. Assessing post-concussion symptoms is useful in identifying individuals at risk for longer recovery.
Introduction Lingering concussion symptoms can negatively impact a child's well-being, yet variability in recovery is poorly understood. To aid detection of those at risk for prolonged symptom duration, we explored postconcussion mood and sleep symptoms as predictors of recovery time in adolescent athletes. Method We utilized analyses designed to control for potentially confounding variables, such as concussion severity indicators and premorbid psychiatric history. Participants included 393 adolescent athletes (aged 12-18 years) evaluated in outpatient concussion clinics within 2 weeks after injury. Provider-documented date of symptom resolution was obtained via medical record review. Survival analysis for recovery time was conducted in the total sample, and separately for males and females using prior medical history (psychiatric disorder, prior concussion), injury-related factors (loss of consciousness, post-traumatic amnesia [PTA], concussion symptom severity), and psychological symptoms (General Anxiety Disorder-7 Item Scale, Patient Health Questionnaire-8 Item Depression Scale, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index) collected at initial clinic visit. Results PTA, concussion symptoms, and sleep quality were associated with recovery in the total sample (HRs = 0.64-0.99, ps < .05). When analyzed by sex, only concussion symptoms were associated with recovery for females (with females reporting greater symptom severity than males), while for males PTA and greater depression symptoms were significant predictors of recovery (HRs = 0.54-0.98, ps < .05). Conclusions These findings identified differences in symptom presentation between sexes, particularly for mood symptoms, and suggest that assessment of postconcussive symptoms is useful in helping to identify individuals at risk for longer recovery. Continued exploration of post-injury psychological difficulties in athletes is warranted for better concussion management.

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