Sinnott Aaron M, Kochick Victoria L, Eagle Shawn R, Trbovich Alicia M, Collins Michael W, Sparto Patrick J, Flanagan Shawn D, Elbin R J, Connaboy Christopher, Kontos Anthony P
Neuromuscular Research Laboratory-Warrior Human Performance Research Center, Department of Sports Medicine and Nutrition, University of Pittsburgh, United States of America; UPMC Sports Medicine Concussion Program, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, United States of America; Matthew Gfeller Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America. Electronic address: https://twitter.com/AaronSinnottATC.
Department of Physical Therapy, Slippery Rock University, United States of America; Centers for Rehabilitation Services-Department of Physical Therapy, University of Pittsburgh, United States of America.
J Sci Med Sport. 2023 Dec;26(12):682-687. doi: 10.1016/j.jsams.2023.09.014. Epub 2023 Sep 22.
Compare physiological (heart rate, heart rate variability, and blood pressure), performance (change-of-direction task completion time and errors), and clinical (symptoms and rating of perceived exertion) outcomes during dynamic exertion between athletes at return to sport after concussion to healthy athlete controls.
Case control.
A sample of 23 (Female = 10; 43.5 %) athletes at medical clearance to play/activity from concussion (CONCUSS) and 23 sex-, age-, and sport-matched healthy athletes (CONTROLS) completed a 5-min seated rest before and after the dynamic exertion test. Independent sample t-tests were used to compare CONCUSS and CONTROLS for completion time, heart rate, and blood pressure; and Mann-Whitney U tests for symptoms, perceived exertion, and errors. A series of ANOVAs were conducted to compare heart rate variability between groups across pre- and post-exercise rest periods.
There were no differences in heart rate, blood pressure, symptoms, perceived exertion, and errors. CONCUSS were faster on Zig Zag (p = .048) and Pro Agility (p = .018) tasks, reported lower symptom severity (p = .019), and had lower post-EXiT HRV (p < .049) than CONTROLS.
Performance, symptoms, perceived exertion, and blood pressure outcomes from dynamic exertion were equivocal between athletes at medical clearance from concussion and healthy controls, which provide empirical support for dynamic exercise to inform medical clearance clinical decision making for sport-related concussion. However, differences in autonomic nervous system functioning indicate that additional research is needed to examine temporal changes in heart rate variability and other physiological outcomes following dynamic exertion.
比较脑震荡后恢复运动的运动员与健康运动员对照组在动态运动期间的生理指标(心率、心率变异性和血压)、运动表现(变向任务完成时间和错误次数)以及临床指标(症状和主观用力感觉评分)。
病例对照研究。
选取23名(女性10名;43.5%)经医学检查允许从脑震荡中恢复参加比赛/活动的运动员(脑震荡组)和23名性别、年龄和运动项目匹配的健康运动员(对照组),在动态运动测试前后分别进行5分钟的坐姿休息。采用独立样本t检验比较脑震荡组和对照组的完成时间、心率和血压;采用曼-惠特尼U检验比较症状、主观用力感觉和错误次数。进行一系列方差分析以比较运动前和运动后休息期间两组之间的心率变异性。
心率、血压、症状、主观用力感觉和错误次数方面没有差异。脑震荡组在Zig Zag任务(p = 0.048)和Pro Agility任务(p = 0.018)上更快,报告的症状严重程度更低(p = 0.019),且运动后心率变异性低于对照组(p < 0.049)。
脑震荡后经医学检查允许参赛的运动员与健康对照组在动态运动中的运动表现、症状、主观用力感觉和血压结果不明确,这为动态运动为与运动相关脑震荡的医学检查临床决策提供依据提供了实证支持。然而,自主神经系统功能的差异表明,需要进一步研究以检查动态运动后心率变异性和其他生理指标的时间变化。