Avedesian Jason M, Covassin Tracey, Baez Shelby, Nash Jennifer, Dufek Janet S
Department of Kinesiology and Nutrition Sciences, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA.
Department of Athletics, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina, USA.
Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2024 Jul;34(7):e14698. doi: 10.1111/sms.14698.
Injury surveillance data indicate that collegiate athletes are at greater risk for lower extremity (LE) injuries following sports-related concussion (SRC). While the association between SRC and LE injury appears to be clinically relevant up to 1-year post-SRC, little evidence has been provided to determine possible mechanistic rationales. Thus, we aimed to compare collegiate athletes with a history of SRC to matched controls on biomechanical and cognitive performance measures associated with LE injury risk. Athletes with a history of SRC (n = 20) and matched controls (n = 20) performed unanticipated bilateral land-and-cut tasks and cognitive assessments. Group-based analyses (ANOVA) and predictive modeling (C5.0 decision tree algorithm) were used to compare group differences on biomechanical and cognitive measures. Collegiate athletes with a history of SRC demonstrated approximately six degrees less peak knee flexion on both dominant (p = 0.03, d = 0.71) and nondominant (p = 0.02, d = 0.78) limbs during the land-and-cut tasks compared to controls. Verbal Memory, knee flexion, and Go/No Go total score (C5.0 decision tree algorithm) were identified as the strongest indicators of previous SRC injury history. Reduced knee flexion during sport-specific land-and-cut tasks may be a mechanism for increased LE injury risk in athletes with a history of SRC. There appears to be multiple biomechanical and cognitive predictors for identifying previous SRC in collegiate athletes, providing evidence to support a multifactorial SRC management strategy to reduce future injury risk.
损伤监测数据表明,与运动相关的脑震荡 (SRC) 后,大学生运动员下肢 (LE) 受伤的风险更高。虽然 SRC 与 LE 损伤之间的关联似乎在 SRC 后 1 年内具有临床相关性,但几乎没有证据表明可能存在机械学依据。因此,我们旨在比较有 SRC 病史的大学生运动员和匹配的对照组在与 LE 受伤风险相关的生物力学和认知表现测量方面的差异。有 SRC 病史的运动员 (n=20) 和匹配的对照组 (n=20) 进行了意外的双侧着地和切割任务以及认知评估。使用基于组的分析 (ANOVA) 和预测建模 (C5.0 决策树算法) 比较了生物力学和认知测量方面的组间差异。与对照组相比,有 SRC 病史的大学生运动员在着地和切割任务中,双侧的膝关节最大屈曲度都减少了约 6 度 (p=0.03,d=0.71;p=0.02,d=0.78)。在言语记忆、膝关节屈曲和 Go/No Go 总得分 (C5.0 决策树算法) 方面,是预测之前 SRC 损伤史的最强指标。在有 SRC 病史的运动员中,运动特定的着地和切割任务中膝关节屈曲度降低可能是 LE 受伤风险增加的机制。似乎有多种生物力学和认知预测指标可以用于识别大学生运动员中的先前 SRC,为支持多因素 SRC 管理策略以降低未来受伤风险提供了证据。