Abstract

BackgroundThe reliable diagnosis of a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a pervasive problem in sports and in the military. The frequency and severity of each occurrence, while difficult to quantify, may impact long term cognitive function and quality of life. Despite the new revelations concerning brain disfunction from head injuries, individuals still feel pressure to remain on the field despite a debilitating injury. In this study, we evaluated the accuracy of a system that could be employed on the sidelines or in the locker room to provide an immediate objective mTBI assessment.MethodsParticipants consisted of 38 individuals with a recent mTBI and 47 controls with no history of mTBI within the last 5 years. Participants were administered a simple symptom questionnaire, behavioral tests, and resting state EEG was measured using three frontopolar electrodes. An advanced machine learning algorithm called boosting was utilized to classify subjects into either injured or controls using power spectral densities on 1-min of resting EEG and the symptom questionnaire.ResultsResults based on leave-one-out cross-validation revealed that the addition of EEG measurements boosted the accuracy to approximately 91 ± 2% compared to 82 ± 4% from the symptom questionnaire alone.ConclusionThis study demonstrated the potential benefit of including EEG measurements to diagnose suspected brain injury patients. This is a step toward accurate and objective classification measurements that can be implemented on the field as a future injury assessment tool.

Highlights

  • The reliable diagnosis of a mild traumatic brain injury is a pervasive problem in sports and in the military

  • It is extremely important to develop a simple, field-portable diagnostic tool that can objectively test for the presence of an mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI)

  • The test from the current study can be implemented on the sideline, locker room, or in a military deployment situation

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Summary

Introduction

The reliable diagnosis of a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a pervasive problem in sports and in the military. Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is highly prevalent, with an estimated 1.6–3.8 million sports-related concussions annually [1, 2] and as many as 320,000 concussions affecting military troops [3, 4]. The many possible symptoms of mTBI are, by themselves, fairly nonspecific and include headaches, dizziness, nausea, light/sound sensitivity, loss of consciousness, amnesia, irritability, cognitive changes, sleep disturbance, and emotional dysregulation. These symptoms can vary in severity and prevalence from person to person, making reliable (2019) 5:14 diagnosis difficult. It is extremely important to develop a simple, field-portable diagnostic tool that can objectively test for the presence of an mTBI

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