Skip Navigation

Journal of Neurotrauma

Not a subscriber? Get started...

Post-Concussion Cognitive Declines and Symptomatology Are Not Related to Concussion Biomechanics in High School Football Players

To cite this article:
Steven P. Broglio, James T. Eckner, Tyler Surma, and Jeffrey S. Kutcher. Journal of Neurotrauma. October 2011, 28(10): 2061-2068. doi:10.1089/neu.2011.1905.

Published in Volume: 28 Issue 10: October 17, 2011
Online Ahead of Print: August 29, 2011
Online Ahead of Editing: June 6, 2011

Author information

Steven P. Broglio,1,4 James T. Eckner,2,4 Tyler Surma,1,4 and Jeffrey S. Kutcher3,4
1Neurotrauma Research Laboratory, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
2Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
3Department of Neurology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
4Michigan NeuroSport, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Address correspondence to:
Steven P. Broglio, Ph.D., A.T.C.
University of Michigan
School of Kinesiology
1402 Washington Heights
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2013
E-mail:

ABSTRACT

Abstract

Concussion is a major public health concern with nearly 4 million injuries occurring each year in the United States. In the acute post-injury stage, concussed individuals demonstrate cognitive function and motor control declines as well as reporting increased symptoms. Researchers have hypothesized that the severity of these impairments is related to impact magnitude. Using the Head Impact Telemetry System (HITS) to record head impact biomechanics, we sought to correlate pre- and post-concussive impact characteristics with declines in cognitive performance and increases in concussion-related symptoms. Over four seasons, 19 high school football athletes wearing instrumented helmets sustained 20 diagnosed concussions. Each athlete completed a baseline computer-based symptom and cognitive assessment during the pre-season and a post-injury assessment within 24 h of injury. Correlational analyses identified no significant relationships between symptoms and cognitive performance change scores and impact biomechanics (i.e., time from session start until injury, time from the previous impact, peak linear acceleration, peak rotational acceleration, and HIT severity profile [HITsp]). Nor were there any significant relationships between change scores and the number of impacts, cumulative linear acceleration, cumulative rotational acceleration, or cumulative HITsp values associated with all impacts prior to or following the injury. This investigation is the first to examine the relationship between concussion impact characteristics, including cumulative impact profiles, and post-morbid outcomes in high school athletes. There appears to be no association between head impact biomechanics and post-concussive outcomes. As such, the use of biomechanical variables to predict injury severity does not appear feasible at this time.

This paper was cited by:

Possible Lingering Effects of Multiple Past Concussions
Grant L. Iverson, Ruben J. Echemendia, Amanda K. LaMarre, Brian L. Brooks, Michael B. Gaetz
Rehabilitation Research and Practice. Jan 2012, Vol. 2012: 1-7
CrossRef

Users who read this article also read

no access
Steven P. Broglio, James T. Eckner, Douglas Martini, Jacob J. Sosnoff, Jeffrey S. Kutcher, Christopher Randolph
Journal of Neurotrauma. October 2011: 2069-2078.
Abstract | Full Text PDF or HTML | Reprints | Permissions
no access
James T. Eckner, Matthew Sabin, Jeffrey S. Kutcher, Steven P. Broglio
Journal of Neurotrauma. October 2011: 2079-2090.
Abstract | Full Text PDF or HTML | Reprints | Permissions
no access
Luke C. Henry, Julie Tremblay, Sebastien Tremblay, Agatha Lee, Caroline Brun, Natasha Lepore, Hugo Theoret, Dave Ellemberg, Maryse Lassonde
Journal of Neurotrauma. October 2011: 2049-2059.
Abstract | Full Text PDF or HTML | Reprints | Permissions
no access
Varun Kesherwani, Sandeep K. Agrawal
Journal of Neurotrauma. April 2012: 1255-1265.
Abstract | Full Text PDF or HTML | Reprints | Permissions
no access
Joost J. van Middendorp, Michael Schuetz
Journal of Neurotrauma. May 2012: 1714-1715.
First Page | Full Text PDF or HTML | Reprints | Permissions
no access
Satoru Takeuchi, Hiroshi Nawashiro, Naoki Otani, Katsuji Shima
Journal of Neurotrauma. March 2012: 1028-1028.
First Page | Full Text PDF or HTML | Reprints | Permissions

Sign up for TOC Alerts


Publication Tools

  • Related articles in Liebert Online

Search:

for

Authors:

Keywords:

Go to Advanced Search