Rehabilitation Sciences Institute, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Concussion Centre, Bloorview Research Institute, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Sports Health. 2018 Mar/Apr;10(2):175-182. doi: 10.1177/1941738117741651. Epub 2017 Nov 13.
Postural stability plays a key role in sport performance, especially after concussion. Specific to healthy child and youth athletes, little is known about the influence development and sex may have on postural stability while considering other subjective clinical measures used in baseline/preinjury concussion assessment. This study aims to describe age- and sex-based trends in postural stability in uninjured child and youth athletes at baseline while accounting for concussion-related factors.
(1) Postural stability performance will improve with age, (2) females will display better postural stability compared to males, and (3) concussion-like symptoms will affect postural stability performance in healthy children and youth.
Cross-sectional study.
Level 3.
This study comprised 889 healthy/uninjured child and youth athletes (54% female, 46% male) between the ages of 9 and 18 years old. Participants completed preseason baseline testing, which included demographic information (age, sex, concussion history), self-report of concussion-like symptoms (Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory [PCSI]-Child and PCSI-Youth), and measures of postural stability (BioSway; Biodex Medical Systems). Two versions of the PCSI were used (PCSI-C, 9- to 12-year-olds; PCSI-Y, 13- to 18-year-olds). Postural stability was assessed via sway index under 4 sway conditions of increasing difficulty by removing visual and proprioceptive cues.
In children aged 9 to 12 years old, there were significant age- ( P < 0.05) and sex-based effects ( P < 0.05) on postural stability. Performance improved with age, and girls performed better than boys. For youth ages 13 to 18 years old, postural stability also improved with age ( P < 0.05). In both child and youth subgroups, postural stability worsened with increasing concussion-like symptoms ( P < 0.05).
There are developmental and baseline symptom trends regarding postural stability performance.
These findings provide a preliminary foundation for postconcussion comparisons and highlight the need for a multimodal approach in assessing and understanding physical measures such as postural stability.
姿势稳定性在运动表现中起着关键作用,尤其是在脑震荡后。对于健康的儿童和青少年运动员来说,很少有研究关注发育和性别因素对姿势稳定性的影响,而这些因素在考虑基线/损伤前脑震荡评估中使用的其他主观临床测量指标时是很重要的。本研究旨在描述未受伤的儿童和青少年运动员在基线时的基于年龄和性别的姿势稳定性趋势,同时考虑与脑震荡相关的因素。
(1)姿势稳定性表现将随着年龄的增长而提高,(2)女性的姿势稳定性表现将优于男性,(3)类似脑震荡的症状会影响健康儿童和青少年的姿势稳定性表现。
横断面研究。
3 级。
本研究包括 889 名健康/未受伤的儿童和青少年运动员(54%为女性,46%为男性),年龄在 9 至 18 岁之间。参与者完成了赛季前的基线测试,包括人口统计学信息(年龄、性别、脑震荡史)、类似脑震荡症状的自我报告(儿童版和青少年版的脑震荡后症状问卷[Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory,PCSI])和姿势稳定性测量(Biosway;Biodex Medical Systems)。使用了两种版本的 PCSI(PCSI-C,9 至 12 岁;PCSI-Y,13 至 18 岁)。姿势稳定性通过在 4 种逐渐增加难度的摆动条件下测量摆动指数来评估,逐渐去除视觉和本体感觉线索。
在 9 至 12 岁的儿童中,姿势稳定性存在显著的年龄(P < 0.05)和性别效应(P < 0.05)。表现随年龄增长而提高,女孩的表现优于男孩。对于 13 至 18 岁的青少年,姿势稳定性也随年龄增长而提高(P < 0.05)。在儿童和青少年两个亚组中,姿势稳定性随类似脑震荡症状的增加而恶化(P < 0.05)。
姿势稳定性表现存在发育和基线症状趋势。
这些发现为脑震荡后比较提供了初步基础,并强调需要采用多模式方法评估和理解姿势稳定性等物理测量指标。