Department of Biomedical Engineering.
The Concussion Center.
J Athl Train. 2018 Jul;53(7):636-645. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-129-17. Epub 2018 Aug 15.
Annually, more than 1 million youth athletes in the United States receive or are suspected of receiving a concussion. The Balance Error Scoring System (BESS) is the most commonly used clinical balance evaluation designed to provide a better understanding of the motor-control processes of individuals with concussion. Despite the widespread use of the BESS, a fundamental gap exists in applying this tool to young athletes, as normative values are lacking for this population.
To determine age- and sex-specific normative values for the BESS in youth, high school, and collegiate athletes.
Cross-sectional study.
Local youth sport organizations, high schools, and colleges.
Student-athletes (N = 6762) completed preseason baseline concussion testing as part of a comprehensive concussion-management program. Groups were youth males aged 5 to 13 years (n = 360), high school males aged 14 to 18 years (n = 3743), collegiate males aged 19 to 23 years (n = 497), youth females aged 5 to 13 years (n = 246), high school females aged 14 to 18 years (n = 1673), and collegiate females aged 19 to 23 years (n = 243).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Errors according to the BESS specifications.
Performance on the BESS was worse ( P < .01) in youth athletes than in high school and collegiate athletes. In the youth and high school cohorts, females exhibited better scores than males ( P < .05). Sex was not a factor for collegiate athletes. Data from the youth cohort were further subdivided into 4-year bins to evaluate potential motor-development differences. The error count was highest for 5- to 9-year-old males and decreased with age.
Performance on the BESS depended on sex and age, particularly in youth athletes. These sex- and age-specific normative values provide a reference to facilitate and unify clinical decision making across multiple providers caring for youth athletes with concussions.
每年,美国有超过 100 万青年运动员受伤或疑似受伤。平衡错误评分系统(BESS)是最常用的临床平衡评估方法,旨在更好地了解脑震荡患者的运动控制过程。尽管 BESS 被广泛使用,但在将该工具应用于年轻运动员时,仍然存在一个基本的差距,因为该人群缺乏规范值。
确定青少年、高中生和大学生运动员 BESS 的年龄和性别特异性规范值。
横断面研究。
当地青年体育组织、高中和大学。
学生运动员(N=6762)作为综合脑震荡管理计划的一部分,完成了赛前基线脑震荡测试。分组为 5 至 13 岁的男青年运动员(n=360)、14 至 18 岁的男高中生运动员(n=3743)、19 至 23 岁的男大学生运动员(n=497)、5 至 13 岁的女青年运动员(n=246)、14 至 18 岁的女高中生运动员(n=1673)和 19 至 23 岁的女大学生运动员(n=243)。
根据 BESS 规范的错误。
BESS 的表现(P<0.01)在青年运动员中比在高中生和大学生运动员中更差。在青年和高中队列中,女性的得分优于男性(P<0.05)。性别不是大学生运动员的因素。青年运动员的数据进一步细分为 4 年组,以评估潜在的运动发育差异。5 至 9 岁男性的错误计数最高,且随年龄增长而降低。
BESS 的表现取决于性别和年龄,特别是在青年运动员中。这些性别和年龄特异性规范值为多个照顾脑震荡青年运动员的提供者提供了一个便利和统一的临床决策参考。