1 Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics, Virginia Tech , Blacksburg, Virginia.
2 Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
J Neurotrauma. 2018 Feb 15;35(4):681-690. doi: 10.1089/neu.2017.5169. Epub 2018 Jan 19.
Concussion is a brain injury induced by biomechanical forces that is broadly defined as a complex pathophysiological process affecting the brain. The intricate link between biomechanical input and concussion injury response is poorly understood. We aimed to test the hypothesis that greater biomechanical forces would result in the presentation of more concussion-related symptoms that would take longer to resolve. The objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between an array of biomechanical parameters measured for concussive impacts and the presentation and resolution of concussion symptoms. A total of 319 collegiate football players from six universities were recruited to participate in this study. Certified athletic trainers and/or team physicians at each site diagnosed and treated concussions sustained by subjects through participation in football. The subjects' helmets were instrumented with accelerometer arrays that measured linear and rotational head accelerations for each impact experienced during games and practices. Correlations between biomechanical measurements associated with concussion symptom presentation and recovery were quantified. A total of 22 subjects collectively sustained 25 concussions, with three subjects sustaining two concussions each. Biomechanical measures associated with injury were not found to be correlated with number of symptoms, Sport Concussion Assessment Tool 3 Symptom Severity Score, or time to symptom resolution. Linear and rotational accelerations associated with injury were not correlated with symptom severity for any of the 22 individual symptoms evaluated. Further, we found no association between impact location and presence of any individual symptom when ignoring severity grade. While concussive impacts did not stand out relative to impacts that did not result in injury, concussive impacts were among the most severe for each individual player. This suggests tolerance to head acceleration might be individual-specific, meaning similar biomechanical inputs can produce different injury presentations between individuals. Future investigations should consider individual-specific analyses of tolerance to head acceleration and injury response.
脑震荡是由机械力引起的脑损伤,通常被定义为影响大脑的复杂病理生理过程。机械输入与脑震荡损伤反应之间的复杂联系尚未得到充分理解。我们旨在检验以下假设:更大的机械力会导致更多的与脑震荡相关的症状出现,并且这些症状的缓解时间更长。本研究的目的是研究在一系列机械参数与脑震荡症状的出现和缓解之间的关系。共有来自六所大学的 319 名大学生足球运动员被招募参加这项研究。每个地点的认证运动训练员和/或队医通过参与足球比赛来诊断和治疗受试者遭受的脑震荡。受试者的头盔上安装了加速度计阵列,用于测量比赛和训练中每次撞击的线性和旋转头部加速度。定量分析了与脑震荡症状出现和恢复相关的生物力学测量之间的相关性。共有 22 名受试者共发生了 25 例脑震荡,其中 3 名受试者各发生了 2 例脑震荡。与损伤相关的生物力学测量与症状数量、运动性脑震荡评估工具 3 症状严重程度评分或症状缓解时间均无相关性。在评估的 22 个个体症状中,与损伤相关的线性和旋转加速度与任何症状的严重程度均无相关性。此外,当忽略严重程度等级时,我们发现冲击部位与任何单个症状的出现之间没有关联。虽然与未导致损伤的冲击相比,脑震荡冲击并不突出,但对于每个个体运动员来说,脑震荡冲击是最严重的。这表明头部加速度的耐受性可能因人而异,这意味着类似的机械输入可能会在个体之间产生不同的损伤表现。未来的研究应考虑对头部加速度和损伤反应的个体特异性分析。