Abstract

Dizziness, slow visual tracking, or blurred vision following active head (or body) movements are among the most common symptoms reported following sport-related concussion, often related to concurrent dysfunctions of the vestibular system. In some cases, symptoms persist even if bedside and auxiliary standard vestibular tests are unremarkable. New functional tests have been developed in recent years to objectify neurological alterations that are not captured by standard tests. The functional head impulse test (fHIT) requires the patient to recognize an optotype that is briefly flashed during head rotations with various angular accelerations (2,001–6,000 deg/s2) and assesses the proportion if correct answers (pca). 268 active professional athletes (23.70 ± 5.32y) from six different sports were tested using fHIT. Pca were analyzed both pooling head acceleration in the range of 2,001–6,000 deg/s2 and computing a single pca value for each 1,000 deg/s2 bin in the range 2,001–8,000 deg/s2. No significant difference (p = 0.159) was found between responses to head impulses in the plane of horizontal (pca: 0.977) and vertical semicircular canals (pca: 0.97). The sport practiced had a major effect on the outcome of the fHIT. Handball players achieved a better performance (p < 0.001) than the whole athlete group, irrespective of the direction of head impulses. The pca achieved by athletes practicing snowboard, bob and skeleton were instead significantly below those of the whole athlete group (p < 0.001) but only when vertical head impulses were tested. Overall, pca declined with increasing head acceleration. The decline was particularly evident in the range not included in the standard fHIT exam, i.e., 6,001–8,000 deg/s2 for horizontal and 5,001–8,000 deg/s2 for vertical head impulses. When vertical head impulses were tested, athletes practicing snowboard, bob and skeleton (non-ball sports) showed, beside the lower overall pca, also a steeper decline as a function of vertical head acceleration. The findings suggest that: (1) functional VOR testing can help understanding sport-specific VOR requirements; (2) the fHIT is able to detect and objectify subtle, sport-specific changes of functional VOR performance; (3) if sport-specific normative values are used, the fHIT test procedure needs to be optimized, starting from the highest acceleration to minimize the number of head impulses.

Highlights

  • Sport-related concussion (SRC, syn; mild traumatic brain injury), the most frequent form of traumatic brain injury, is a clinical diagnosis [1, 2] frequently based on the results of symptom scales and neurological, neuropsychological and balance examinations

  • Horizontal vs. Vertical Canals The functional head impulse test (fHIT) test outcome computed over the whole athlete group according to the standard procedure of the fHIT software evidenced no differences between head impulses in the plane of the horizontal and of the vertical canals (Figure 2)

  • Despite a non-significant difference was found between head impulses in the plane of the horizontal and vertical canals in the whole athlete group, between-sport analysis revealed that a canal–sport interaction was present

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sport-related concussion (SRC, syn; mild traumatic brain injury), the most frequent form of traumatic brain injury, is a clinical diagnosis [1, 2] frequently based on the results of symptom scales and neurological, neuropsychological and balance examinations. Concussion typically results in the rapid onset of short-lived functional impairments that resolve spontaneously, clinical recovery might be prolonged and unpredictable in selected cases [2, 3]. If examinations are performed several days after the impact, the reported symptoms might not match with the picture emerging from the results of objective clinical tests [5]. The latter situation, is not uncommon in professional athletes, where a short period of rest followed by rapid return to routine training and match play is often attempted and referral to specialized centers occurs only when symptoms fail to subside spontaneously

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call