Modern Human Anatomy Program, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
Department of Orthopedics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
PM R. 2023 Sep;15(9):1122-1129. doi: 10.1002/pmrj.12939. Epub 2023 Feb 15.
Both sleep duration and physical activity following concussion may influence subsequent recovery. Objective measurement of sleep and physical activity behavior via wearable technology may provide insights into their association with concussion recovery.
To determine whether sleep behavior (eg, duration, timing) and/or physical activity (steps/day, or exercise frequency, duration, intensity) in the first month after adolescent sports-related concussion are associated with developing persisting postconcussion symptoms (PPCS).
Case-control.
Outpatient sports medicine clinic.
The study prospectively enrolled adolescent athletes who sustained a concussion (N = 49, age = 14.8 ± 1.8 years; 51% female) who were evaluated within 14 days of concussion (mean = 6.7 ± 2.7 days) and followed uvia sleep/physical activity monitoring for the subsequent 2 weeks.
Participants wore a monitor to track sleep (sleep time, wake time, and time spent awake in bed at night) and physical activity (average steps/day, exercise frequency, exercise duration) behavior for 2 weeks after initial assessment. Participants were followed until symptom resolution, and the main outcome of interest was development of PPCS (symptom duration >28 days). A multivariable logistic regression model was used to examine associations between physical activity and sleep behavior with PPCS.
Of the 49 participants, 47% (n = 23, mean symptom resolution = 57 ± 23 days post injury) developed PPCS and 53% (n = 26, mean symptom resolution = 15 ± 7 days post injury) did not. Univariable analysis showed that the PPCS group took fewer steps/day (7526 ± 2975 vs. 9803 ± 3786 steps/day; p = .02), exercised less frequently (2.5 ± 2.2 vs. 4.4 ± 2.1 days/week; p = .005), and spent more time in bed awake (1.2 ± 0.3 vs. 0.8 ± 0.3 h/night; p = .03) than the no PPCS group. Multivariable results indicated the odds of developing PPCS significantly increased with fewer exercise session/week (adjusted odds ratio = 1.96, 95% confidence interval = 1.09, 3.51, p = .024).
More exercise sessions that were longer than 15 minutes during concussion recovery was associated with a lower risk of developing PPCS, whereas sleep and other physical activity measures were not. Further studies regarding exercise duration and intensity are needed. Clinicians may consider advising patients to optimize sleep and physical activity during concussion recovery.
脑震荡后睡眠时长和身体活动都可能影响后续恢复。通过可穿戴技术对睡眠和身体活动行为进行客观测量,可能有助于了解它们与脑震荡恢复的关系。
确定青少年运动相关性脑震荡后第一个月的睡眠行为(例如,时长、时间)和/或身体活动(步数/天或运动频率、时长、强度)是否与持续存在的脑震荡后症状(PPCS)有关。
病例对照研究。
运动医学门诊。
该研究前瞻性纳入了年龄在 14.8±1.8 岁(51%为女性)、发生运动相关性脑震荡的青少年运动员(N=49),在脑震荡后 14 天内接受评估(平均 6.7±2.7 天),并通过睡眠/身体活动监测在随后的 2 周内进行随访。
参与者在初次评估后佩戴监测仪跟踪睡眠(睡眠时间、醒来时间和夜间卧床时的清醒时间)和身体活动(平均每日步数、运动频率、运动时长)行为,为期 2 周。参与者随访至症状缓解,主要观察终点为出现 PPCS(症状持续时间>28 天)。使用多变量逻辑回归模型来检验身体活动和睡眠行为与 PPCS 的关联。
49 名参与者中,47%(n=23,平均症状缓解时间为受伤后 57±23 天)出现 PPCS,53%(n=26,平均症状缓解时间为受伤后 15±7 天)未出现。单变量分析显示,PPCS 组的每日步数较少(7526±2975 步与 9803±3786 步;p=0.02),运动频率较低(2.5±2.2 次与 4.4±2.1 次/周;p=0.005),夜间卧床时清醒时间较长(1.2±0.3 小时与 0.8±0.3 小时;p=0.03)。多变量结果表明,每周运动次数减少与出现 PPCS 的几率显著增加相关(调整后的比值比为 1.96,95%置信区间为 1.09~3.51,p=0.024)。
脑震荡恢复期间,增加运动次数(每次持续时间>15 分钟)与降低出现 PPCS 的风险相关,而睡眠和其他身体活动指标则无关。需要进一步研究运动时长和强度。临床医生可能会考虑建议患者在脑震荡康复期间优化睡眠和身体活动。