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      Concussion Recovery Phase Affects Vestibular and Oculomotor Symptom Provocation

      1 , 1 , 1 , 2 , 2 , 3
      International Journal of Sports Medicine
      Georg Thieme Verlag KG

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          Abstract

          Vestibular and oculomotor testing is emerging as a valuable assessment in sport-related concussion (SRC). However, their usefulness for tracking recovery and guiding return-to-play decisions remains unclear. Therefore the purpose of this study was to evaluate their clinical usefulness for tracking SRC recovery. Vestibular and oculomotor assessments were used to measure symptom provocation in an acute group (n=21) concussed≤10 days, prolonged symptoms group (n=10) concussed ≥16 days (median=84 days), healthy group (n=58) no concussions in >6 months. Known-groups approach was used with three groups at three time points (initial, 2-week and 6-week follow-up). Provoked symptoms for Gaze-Stabilization (GST), Rapid Eye Horizontal (REH), Optokinetic Stimulation (OKS), Smooth-Pursuit Slow (SPS) and Fast (SPF) tests, total combined symptoms scores and near point convergence (NPC) distance were significantly greater at initial assessment in both injury groups compared to controls. Injury groups improved on the King-Devick test and combined symptom provocation scores across time. The acute group improved over time on REH and SPF tests, while the prolonged symptoms group improved on OKS. A regression model (REH, OKS, GST) was 90% accurate discriminating concussed from healthy. Vestibular and ocular motor tests give valuable insight during recovery. They can prove beneficial in concussion evaluation given the modest equipment, training and time requirements. The current study demonstrates that when combined, vestibular and oculomotor clinical tests aid in the detection of deficits following a SRC. Additionally, tests such as NPC, GST, REH, SPS, SPF OKS and KD provide valuable information to clinicians throughout the recovery process and may aid in return to play decisions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          International Journal of Sports Medicine
          Int J Sports Med
          Georg Thieme Verlag KG
          0172-4622
          1439-3964
          February 02 2018
          February 2018
          November 30 2017
          February 2018
          : 39
          : 02
          : 141-147
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Temple University, Kinesiology, Philadelphia, United States
          [2 ]Temple University, Neuromotor Sciences Program, Philadelphia, United States
          [3 ]Temple University, Physical Therapy, Philadelphia, United States
          Article
          10.1055/s-0043-118339
          29190849
          b35798f4-59e0-4971-9793-e92b386c864c
          © 2018
          History

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