Covassin Tracey, Schatz Philip, Swanik C Buz
Department of Kinesiology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824-1049, USA.
Neurosurgery. 2007 Aug;61(2):345-50; discussion 350-1. doi: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000279972.95060.CB.
Our purpose was to determine whether sex differences exist with respect to post-concussion symptoms and neurocognitive function in concussed collegiate athletes.
A prospective dependent-sample cohort design was used to compare baseline and post-concussion neuropsychological test scores and endorsed symptoms as functions of serial post-concussion assessment with respect to time and sex. The Immediate Post-concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT) battery was administered to a multicenter analysis group of 79 concussed athletes. This computerized neuropsychological test was given to the athletes during the preseason and, on average, 2 and 8 days postinjury.
Multivariate analyses revealed no significant between-group differences on baseline test performance with respect to sex on any of the ImPACT composite scores or on the total symptom score. Multivariate analyses of post-concussion data revealed a significant main effect of time on ImPACT scores, but no main effect of sex was identified, and no time-by-sex interaction existed. Post hoc analysis revealed that concussed female athletes performed significantly worse than concussed male athletes on visual memory tasks (P = 0.001), and analysis of endorsed post-concussion symptoms revealed that concussed men were significantly more likely than concussed women to report post-concussion symptoms of vomiting (P = 0.001) and sadness (P = 0.017). Athletes' scores were examined individually using the reliable-change methodology. At 2 days post-injury, 58% of concussed athletes had one or more reliable incidents of performance decline or increases in symptom reporting. At 8 days post-concussion, 30% of concussed athletes were still showing one or more reliable change from preseason values.
College athletes exhibit differences on visual memory composite scores and symptoms post-concussion as a function of sex. These data support the importance of evaluating neuropsychological status and post-concussion symptoms in concussed athletes. In addition, these data illustrate the importance of analyzing an individual athlete's recovery pattern, because individual differences in recovery trajectories may be overshadowed by global norm-group comparisons.
我们的目的是确定在脑震荡的大学生运动员中,脑震荡后症状和神经认知功能方面是否存在性别差异。
采用前瞻性依存样本队列设计,比较基线和脑震荡后神经心理测试分数,并将认可的症状作为脑震荡后系列评估中时间和性别的函数。对79名脑震荡运动员的多中心分析组进行了即时脑震荡评估和认知测试(ImPACT)成套测试。这项计算机化神经心理测试在季前赛期间以及受伤后平均2天和8天对运动员进行。
多变量分析显示,在任何ImPACT综合分数或总症状分数方面,基线测试表现上性别之间无显著组间差异。脑震荡后数据的多变量分析显示时间对ImPACT分数有显著主效应,但未发现性别主效应,也不存在时间与性别的交互作用。事后分析显示,脑震荡女性运动员在视觉记忆任务上的表现明显比脑震荡男性运动员差(P = 0.001),对认可的脑震荡后症状的分析显示,脑震荡男性比脑震荡女性更有可能报告呕吐(P = 0.001)和悲伤(P = 0.017)的脑震荡后症状。使用可靠变化方法对运动员的分数进行单独检查。受伤后2天,58%的脑震荡运动员有一次或多次可靠的表现下降或症状报告增加事件。脑震荡后8天,30%的脑震荡运动员仍显示与季前值有一次或多次可靠变化。
大学生运动员在脑震荡后的视觉记忆综合分数和症状方面表现出性别差异。这些数据支持了评估脑震荡运动员神经心理状态和脑震荡后症状的重要性。此外,这些数据说明了分析个体运动员恢复模式的重要性,因为恢复轨迹的个体差异可能会被整体常模组比较所掩盖。