Hold Your Child Out of Sports Following a Concussion

Michael Phelan
Attorney
(866) 735-1102 Ext 375
Posted by Michael PhelanMay 05, 2009 3:24 PM

I know many well-meaning parents who are guilty of allowing their child to be rushed back into contact sports following a concussion. Whether the concussion is suffered in a car accident or a sports-related incident, the same issue typically arises- the child wants to go back to sports immediately after getting checked out at the hospital. I know enough about mild brain injury to know this is usually a bad idea, particularly for children who have had multiple concussions. I've often struggled with the internal debate between not wanting to interfere with another family's decision and knowing that one can suffer mild brain damage that may not show up on the hospital CT scan. I now have a new study to cite to fellow parents.

Using a computer-based training program created to assess athletes with concussions and determine when it was safe for them to return to sports, researchers at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia followed 116 children at an urban Level 1 trauma center over two years. The tests revealed an alarmingly high rate of cognitive deficits in nearly all patients during initial testing. The program tests specific abilities, such as attention span, memory, nonverbal problem solving and reaction time. Almost all patients tested below the 25 percentile in at least one area; the majority demonstrated significant impairment for all four subtests.

The test also assesses the degree of concussion symptoms, and the majority of children with concussions demonstrated an abnormal symptom score. The follow-up group demonstrated significant improvement in neurocognitive performance on all four subtests as well as an improvement in their symptom scores. Prior research has demonstrated that children are more likely to sustain another concussion if they return to sports or exertional activities prematurely. In addition, high school athletes recover more slowly than college or professional athletes. Presumably the same is true for children with concussion from non-sports related causes.

The authors of this study recommend that a qualified healthcare provider perform a formal assessment after hospital discharge and before a concussed child is allowed to resume exertional activities, particularly contact sports. The referenced article appears in the May issue of the journal, Annals of Surgery.

3 Comments

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steve
Posted by steve
May 05, 2009 4:19 PM

Mike,
The one diagnosable condition in players with recurrant concussion, displaced jaw cartilage, has now been recognized by the Washington Capitals workers compensation provider. A new research paper confirming a reduction in concussion from blows to the jaw along with three peer reviewed papers, is now a concern for all parties involved. The NLF's ability to minimize the long term effects of concussion have kept this innovation from the public. Over two decades of use with the N.E.Patriots and now the NHL and NBA, more attention needs to be put on this proactive preventitive procedure. A platoon of soldiers in Iraq is now protected with this device, it is time for a sweeping change in how prevention is looked at when it comes to concussion from blows to the jaw. More ...

Michael Phelan
Posted by Michael Phelan
May 05, 2009 4:24 PM

I read about your device about a year ago after blogging about the NFL's attempts to minimize the long term effects of concussions and am glad to hear it's now being utilized by our military. Keep up the fight.

st
Posted by st
May 05, 2009 4:59 PM

Many wonder how the NFL would benefit from minimizing the effects of concussion to its "workers", especially from blows to the jaw. It helps to sell helmets and promote a safe game, which are for protecting from blows to the crown of the head and has been a major part of a Riddell concussion/NFL research farce. Also, just like "Big Tobacco", manufacturing their own research has helped to keep insurance premiums for long term care of their "workers" under control. It obvious their plan has worked, the current state of retired NFL player health coverage is worse than your local Dunkin Doughnuts employee, but the NFLPA and owners have saved a bundle. How is it possible for a "union" in this country, to not be under the scrutiny of OSHA. Such oversight would debunk all of their past research fabrications, one major minimization, the majority of concussion originates at the chinstrap/ TMJ or jaw joint, something that has now been proven in military research. It's flat out criminal.

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