Abstract

ObjectivesTo determine incidence rates, severity and the nature of concussion in professional rugby union in Ireland. DesignRetrospective observational study of time-loss concussion. SettingProfessional rugby union in Ireland. Participants160 male professional rugby union players. Outcome measuresIncidence rates (concussion/1000 player-match-hours) and mean/median severity (days absence) of concussion. ResultsThis study observed 60 concussions in 47 players over the course of the 2016/17 season. The match concussion incidence rate was 18.4/1000 player-match-hours. Mean and median severity was 12 and 10 days respectively. Overall burden of match concussion was 5 days absence per team per match. Concussion severity (days absence) correlated positively with the number of symptoms (rs 0.32, p = 0.022) and symptom severity score (rs 0.28, p = 0.045) on HIA2/SCAT3 forms. A negative correlation was observed between symptom severity score and the number of days until subsequent injury (rs −0.28, p = 0.049). Tackling was the most common inciting event responsible for concussion. ConclusionsThe burden of concussion in professional rugby union is high. Incidence rates appear to be increasing year on year while severity is unchanged. Return to play results in this study highlight the need for caution in concussion recovery and return to play protocols.

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