sport related injuries - treatments
TRANSCRIPT
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Historical account
Foot ball fatalities have been tracked since 1931
Second-impact syndrome was first described by Saunders in 1984
Between 1984 and 1991, only four cases were documented
In 1994 it was discovered that a previously concussed football player was six times as likely to suffer a concussion
In 2002 A high-school football student was concussed twice within two weeks. Collapsed on the field and died six days later.
In 2010 the NFL made a new rule against leading with the head to prevent concussions
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Historical Account
1966 Concussion defined as “A clinical syndrome characterized by Immediate and transient post traumatic impairment of neural function due to brainstem involvement” ( by the Committee of Head Injury Nomenclature of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons)
2001 It’s defined as “a complex pathophysiological process affecting the brain, induced by traumatic biomechanical forces”
Caused by direct or indirect blow to head Rapid onset of short lived impairment of neurologic function Acute clinical symptoms-functional disturbance May or may not be a loss of consciousness Associated with grossly normal structural neuroimaging
( By the Committee on head injury nomenclature of the Congress of Neurologic Surgeons)
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Grades of a Concussion
Grade 1 Transient confusion No loss of
consciousness Mental status
abnormalities resolve in 15 minutes or less
Grade 2 Similar to grade one
differing only in duration. Symptoms lasting 15 minutes or more.
Grade 3 Loss of
consciousness, brief or prolonged.
Former NFL players talk about concussions
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Historical Account2004 International conference on concussion in Sport Prague 2004
Simple Concussion Complex Concussion
Resolves without complication over 7-10 days
No further intervention is required during recovery
Rest until all symptoms resolve
Testing from normal physician
Encompasses cases where athletes suffer persistent symptoms
Concussive convulsions Prolonged loss of consciousness (>
1min) Prolonged cognitive impairment
following injury Multiple concussions over time Testing from physicians with
specific expertise in the management of concussive injury (sports medicine doctor with experience in concussion, sports neurologist or neurosurgeon)
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Signs and Symptoms: Short termCognitive Features Typical Symptoms
Unaware of period, opposition, score of game
Confusion Amnesia Loss of consciousness
Headache or pressure in the head
Balance problems or dizziness
Nausea Feeling “dinged”,
“foggy”, Stunned, or “dazed”
Visual problems Irritability or emotional
changes
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Signs and Symptoms: Short termPhysical Signs
Loss of consciousness/impaired conscious state
Poor coordination or balance
Concussive convulsion/impact seizure
Gait unsteadiness/loss of balance
Slow to answer questions or follow directions
Easily distracted, poor concentration
Displaying inappropriate emotions (eg. Laughing or crying)
Vomiting Vacant stare/glassy eyed Slurred speech Personality changes Inappropriate playing behavior
(eg. running the wrong direction) Significantly decreased playing
ability
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The Scat CardThe SCAT Card(Sport Concussion Assessment Tool)MEDICAL EVALUATION Name: _____________________ Date: __________ Sport/Team: ________________ Mouth Guard? Y N 1) SIGNSWas there loss of consciousness or unresponsiveness? Y NWas there seizure or convulsive activity? Y NWas there a balance problem/unsteadiness? Y N 2) MEMORYModified Maddocks questions (check those correct) At what venue are we? ___ Which half is it? ___ Who scored last?
___What team did we play last? ___
Did we win last game? ___ 3) SYMPTOM SCORETotal number of positive symptoms (from “SYMPTOMS” box on
other side of the card) = ______ 4) COGNITIVE ASSESSMENT(Check those correct)5 word recall Immediate Delayed
(Examples) (after concentration tasks)Word 1 _______ cat ___ ___Word 2 _______ pen ___ ___Word 3 _______ shoe ___ ___Word 4 _______ book ___ ___Word 5 _______ car ___ ___
Months in reverse order (circle those incorrect) Jun-May-Apr-Mar-Feb-Jan-Dec-Nov-Oct-Sep-Aug-Jul
ORDigits backwards (check those correct)5-2-8 3-9-1 ___6-2-9-4 4-3-7-1 ___8-3-2-7-9 1-4-9-3-6 ___7-3-9-1-4-2 5-1-8-4-6-8 ___ Ask delayed 5-word recall now 5) NEUROLOGICAL SCREENING
Pass FailSpeech ___ ___Eye Motion and Pupils ___ ___Pronator Drift ___ ___Gait Assessment ___ ___Any neurologic screening abnormality necessitates formal
neurologic or hospital assessment. 6) RETURN TO PLAY ATHLETES SHOULD NOT BE RETURNED TO PLAY THE SAME DAY
OF INJURY.When returning athletes to play, they should follow a stepwise
symptom-limited program, with stages of progression. For example:
1. rest until asymptomatic (physical and mental rest)2. light aerobic exercise (e.g. stationary cycle)3. sport-specific training4. non-contact training drills (start light resistance training)5. full contact training after medical clearance6. return to competition (game play) There should be approximately 24 hours (or longer) for each stage and
the athlete should return to stage 1 if symptoms recur. Resistance training should only be added in the later stages.
Medical clearance should be given before return to play.
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Signs and Symptoms: Long term Symptoms increase with repeat concussions Chronic Headaches Chronic Dizziness Dementia Depression
Second impact syndrome death
Post concussive syndrome Continual display of symptoms such as headache, cognitive
dysfunction, irritability Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy or CTE
TAU proteins Loss of ability to control muscles
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Signs and Symptoms: Long Term EffectsChronic Traumatic Encephalopathy or CTE
• Memory Loss • Aggression • Confusion• Depression
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Baby shaken syndrome
Symptoms and Signs
Small brain Inability to hold head
Damage to spinal cord and neck
Bleeding in the brain Metal retardation
Blindness Bleeding in retina
Fracture of bones
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Neurological Findings
Postural Stability and Neuropsychological deficits
Design Baseline Pre-Season Follow up Post injury days
1,3,5 Control subjects
Measurements Assessed postural stability Neurocognitive functioning
was measured with: Trail-making test Wechsler Digit Span test Stroop color Word Test Hopkins Verbal Learning test
Results Subjects demonstrated
postural stability deficits significantly worse than both preseason scores and matched control subjects
Trail-Making test B and Wechsler Digit Span test resulted lowered performance
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TREATMENTS•Sleep & Rest
day and night
•Medicationsacetaminophen,
ibuprofen
•Observationfirst 24 hours Treatment is directed at
symptom control for:
headaches
nausea
dizziness
insomnia
- most symptoms resolve within a week
to 10 days
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Usual Outcomes
Serious head injuries can result in anything from full recovery to
death or a permanent coma.
• 300,000 sports-related concussions reported each year.
Akron Basketball
•Recovery in less than 14 days(simple concussion)
•post-concussion syndrome (complicated concussion)
•cumulative effects(complicated concussion)
•second-impact syndrome(very complicated concussion)
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Brain Areas AffectedDepends on where the damage occurs
Frontal lobe, occipital lobe, temporal lobe, hippocampus, cerebellum, etc.
"You can see there are hardly any areas untouched by the damage. I would call it incredible chaos in the brain.“-Dr. Ann McKee , University of Boston
BIG BABY DAVIS
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Who does it happen too?
Males- more male athletes play at-risk sports that give them a greater chance to get a concussion
Football, hockey, rugbee, lacross Age?
It occurs more severly in children, but happen more to adults do the increased aggressiveness and intensity of the sports.
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THE SCIENCE!!
“A concussion is the action of the brain smacking up against the skull”- professor Pillatery
-most improperly diagnosed/ or not diagnosed at all.
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jy2f9_Gtvo&NR=1
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Immediate symptoms
Disruption in neurological impulses Level 1- Level 2- Level 3-
Memory- right beforeDizziness/ disorientation- neurons trying to
refire
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Swelling of the brain
Neural damage Glutamate storm Neurotransmitter spill
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Blood brain barrier/autoregulation
Self-regulatory Epithelial cells Tight junction
Immune response Blood acidity Immune chemicals destroy neural tissue Destruction of neural tissue
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Second impact syndrome
A second concussion tremendously increases ICP to the point that blood can no longer properly circulate through the brain resulting in extreme brain damage and death. (ischemia
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ICP
ICP= tissue+blood+CSF
-Blood pooling (hematoma)- Ischemia - Hypoxia