Department of Kinesiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia; UGA Concussion Research Laboratory, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia.
Department of Orthopedics, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York.
Pediatr Neurol. 2018 Apr;81:19-24. doi: 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2017.12.017. Epub 2018 Jan 31.
Individuals who sustain their first concussion during childhood may be at greater risk of sustaining multiple concussions throughout their lifetime because of a longer window of vulnerability. This article aims to estimate the association between age at first concussion and number of subsequent concussions.
A total of 23,582 collegiate athletes from 26 universities and military cadets from three military academies completed a concussion history questionnaire (65% males, age 19.9 ± 1.4 years). Participants self-reported concussions and age at time of each injury. Participants with a history of concussion (n = 3,647, 15.5%) were categorized as having sustained their first concussion during childhood (less than ten years old) or adolescence (≥10 and ≤18 years old). Poisson regression was used to model age group (childhood, adolescence) predicting the number of subsequent concussions (0, 1, 2+). A second Poisson regression was developed to determine whether age at first concussion predicted the number of subsequent concussions.
Participants self-reporting their first concussion during childhood had an increased risk of subsequent concussions (rate ratio = 2.19, 95% confidence interval: 1.82, 2.64) compared with participants self-reporting their first concussion during adolescence. For every one-year increase in age at first concussion, we observed a 16% reduction in the risk of subsequent concussion (rate ratio = 0.84, 95% confidence interval: 0.82, 0.86).
Individuals self-reporting a concussion at a young age sustained a higher number of concussions before age 18. Concussion prevention, recognition, and reporting strategies are of particular need at the youth level.
儿童时期首次遭受脑震荡的个体,由于易受伤的时间窗口更长,一生中可能多次遭受脑震荡。本文旨在评估首次脑震荡年龄与后续脑震荡次数之间的相关性。
来自 26 所大学的 23582 名大学生运动员和来自三所军事学院的军校学员完成了一份脑震荡史调查问卷(65%为男性,年龄 19.9±1.4 岁)。参与者自我报告脑震荡和每次受伤时的年龄。有脑震荡病史的参与者(n=3647,15.5%)分为儿童期(10 岁以下)或青春期(≥10 岁且≤18 岁)首次发生脑震荡。使用泊松回归模型,以年龄组(儿童期、青春期)为预测变量,预测后续脑震荡(0、1、2+)的数量。还制定了第二个泊松回归模型,以确定首次脑震荡年龄是否可预测后续脑震荡的数量。
与青春期首次发生脑震荡的参与者相比,自我报告儿童期首次发生脑震荡的参与者发生后续脑震荡的风险更高(发病率比=2.19,95%置信区间:1.82,2.64)。首次发生脑震荡的年龄每增加 1 岁,我们观察到后续脑震荡的风险降低 16%(发病率比=0.84,95%置信区间:0.82,0.86)。
自我报告年龄较小发生脑震荡的个体,在 18 岁之前发生脑震荡的次数更多。青少年时期尤其需要预防、识别和报告脑震荡的策略。