Abstract

Objective: To determine the stability of children's retrospective ratings of pre-injury levels of symptoms over time following concussion.Methods: Children and adolescents (n = 3,063) between the ages of 5–17 diagnosed with a concussion by their treating pediatric emergency department (PED) physician within 48 h of injury completed the Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory (PCSI) at the PED and at 1, 2, 4, 8, and 12-weeks post-injury. At each time point, participants retrospectively recalled their pre-injury levels of post-injury symptoms. The PCSI has three age-appropriate versions for children aged 5–7 (PCSI-SR5), 8–12 (PCSI-SR8), and 13–18 (PCSI-SR13). Total scale, subscales (physical, cognitive, emotional, and sleep), and individual items from the PCSI were analyzed for stability using Gini's mean difference (GMD).Results: The mean GMD for total score was 0.31 (95% CI = 0.28, 0.34) for the PCSI-SR5, 0.19 (95% CI = 0.18, 0.20) for the PCSI-SR8, and 0.17 (95% CI = 0.16, 0.18) for the PCSI-SR13. Subscales ranged from mean GMD 0.18 (physical) to 0.31 (emotional) for the PCSI-SR8 and 0.16 (physical) to 0.31 (fatigue) for the PCSI-SR13. At the item-level, mean GMD ranged from 0.13 to 0.60 on the PCSI-SR5, 0.08 to 0.59 on the PCSI-SR8, and 0.11 to 0.41 on the PCSI-SR13.Conclusions: Children and adolescents recall their retrospective pre-injury symptom ratings with good-to-perfect stability over the first 3-months following their concussion. Although some individual items underperformed, variability was reduced as items were combined at the subscale and full-scale level. There is limited benefit gained from collecting multiple pre-injury symptom queries.Clinical Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov through the US National Institute of Health/National Library of Medicine. (NCT01873287; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01873287).

Highlights

  • Concussions are a prevalent injury among children and adolescents throughout North America

  • Subscales ranged from mean Gini’s mean difference (GMD) 0.18 to 0.31 for the Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory (PCSI)-SR8 and 0.16 to 0.31 for the PCSI-SR13

  • Some individual items underperformed, variability was reduced as items were combined at the subscale and full-scale level

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Summary

Introduction

Concussions are a prevalent injury among children and adolescents throughout North America. An objective biomarker for concussion diagnosis and subsequent recovery is elusive. Health care providers must rely upon a clinical examination in combination with symptom, balance, and cognitive assessments for concussion diagnosis and management [5, 6]. This can be difficult when evaluating children and adolescents, especially elementary-aged children, as current clinical assessments are developed for use with adults and are often not validated or developmentally appropriate for young patients [7]

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