Guskiewicz Kevin M, McCrea Michael, Marshall Stephen W, Cantu Robert C, Randolph Christopher, Barr William, Onate James A, Kelly James P
Departments of Exercise and Sport Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 27599, USA.
JAMA. 2003 Nov 19;290(19):2549-55. doi: 10.1001/jama.290.19.2549.
Approximately 300 000 sport-related concussions occur annually in the United States, and the likelihood of serious sequelae may increase with repeated head injury.
To estimate the incidence of concussion and time to recovery after concussion in collegiate football players.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Prospective cohort study of 2905 football players from 25 US colleges were tested at preseason baseline in 1999, 2000, and 2001 on a variety of measures and followed up prospectively to ascertain concussion occurrence. Players injured with a concussion were monitored until their concussion symptoms resolved and were followed up for repeat concussions until completion of their collegiate football career or until the end of the 2001 football season.
Incidence of concussion and repeat concussion; type and duration of symptoms and course of recovery among players who were injured with a concussion during the seasons.
During follow-up of 4251 player-seasons, 184 players (6.3%) had a concussion, and 12 (6.5%) of these players had a repeat concussion within the same season. There was an association between reported number of previous concussions and likelihood of incident concussion. Players reporting a history of 3 or more previous concussions were 3.0 (95% confidence interval, 1.6-5.6) times more likely to have an incident concussion than players with no concussion history. Headache was the most commonly reported symptom at the time of injury (85.2%), and mean overall symptom duration was 82 hours. Slowed recovery was associated with a history of multiple previous concussions (30.0% of those with > or =3 previous concussions had symptoms lasting >1 week compared with 14.6% of those with 1 previous concussion). Of the 12 incident within-season repeat concussions, 11 (91.7%) occurred within 10 days of the first injury, and 9 (75.0%) occurred within 7 days of the first injury.
Our study suggests that players with a history of previous concussions are more likely to have future concussive injuries than those with no history; 1 in 15 players with a concussion may have additional concussions in the same playing season; and previous concussions may be associated with slower recovery of neurological function.
在美国,每年约有30万例与运动相关的脑震荡发生,并且严重后遗症的可能性可能会随着头部反复受伤而增加。
评估大学橄榄球运动员脑震荡的发生率以及脑震荡后的恢复时间。
设计、地点和参与者:对来自美国25所大学的2905名橄榄球运动员进行前瞻性队列研究,于1999年、2000年和2001年季前赛基线时对他们进行了各种测量,并进行前瞻性随访以确定脑震荡的发生情况。脑震荡受伤的运动员被监测直至脑震荡症状消失,并对再次发生的脑震荡进行随访,直至其大学橄榄球生涯结束或2001年橄榄球赛季结束。
脑震荡和再次脑震荡的发生率;赛季中脑震荡受伤球员的症状类型和持续时间以及恢复过程。
在4251个运动员赛季的随访期间,184名球员(6.3%)发生了脑震荡,其中12名(6.5%)球员在同一赛季内再次发生脑震荡。既往脑震荡报告次数与发生脑震荡的可能性之间存在关联。报告有3次或更多次既往脑震荡史的球员发生脑震荡的可能性是无脑震荡史球员的3.0倍(95%置信区间,1.6 - 5.6)。头痛是受伤时最常报告的症状(85.2%),平均总体症状持续时间为82小时。恢复缓慢与多次既往脑震荡史有关(既往有3次或更多次脑震荡的患者中,30.0%的症状持续超过1周,而既往有1次脑震荡的患者中这一比例为14.6%)。在12例赛季内再次发生的脑震荡中,11例(91.7%)发生在首次受伤后的10天内,9例(75.0%)发生在首次受伤后的7天内。
我们的研究表明,有既往脑震荡史的球员比无既往史的球员未来更有可能发生脑震荡;每15名脑震荡球员中就有1名可能在同一赛季再次发生脑震荡;既往脑震荡可能与神经功能恢复较慢有关。