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The Journal of pediatrics · Jan 2021
Multicenter StudySymptom Burden, School Function, and Physical Activity One Year Following Pediatric Concussion.
- Jacquie van Ierssel, Andrée-Anne Ledoux, Ken Tang, Rhonda Correll, Keith Owen Yeates, Gerald Gioia, Stephen B Freedman, Gurinder Sangha, Kathy Boutis, Darcy Beer, William Craig, Emma Burns, Angelo Mikrogianakis, Alexander S Dubrovsky, Isabelle Gagnon, Jocelyn Gravel, Candice McGahern, Martin H Osmond, Roger Zemek, and Pediatric Emergency Research Canada (PERC) Concussion Team.
- Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Canada. Electronic address: jminnes@cheo.on.ca.
- J. Pediatr. 2021 Jan 1; 228: 190-198.e3.
ObjectivesTo characterize symptom burden, school function, and physical activity in youth 1 year following acute concussion and those with subsequent repeat concussion.Study DesignSecondary analysis of Predicting Persistent Postconcussive Problems in Pediatrics prospective, multicenter cohort study conducted in 9 Canadian emergency departments. Participants were children between ages 5 and 18 years who presented consecutively ≤48 hours of concussion and agreed to participate in a post hoc electronic survey 1 year after injury. Outcomes were assessed using a standardized 25-question symptom scale derived from the Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory-Parent; school function and physical activity outcomes were queried. The primary outcome was total symptom score 1 year following concussion, defined as the number of symptoms experienced more than before injury.ResultsOf 3052 youth enrolled in the Predicting Persistent Postconcussive Problems in Pediatrics study, 432 (median [IQR] age, 11.5 [9,14] years; 266 [62%] male) completed the 1-year survey; 34 respondents reported a repeat concussion. Following acute concussion, youth were more likely to be symptom-free than following repeat concussion (75% vs 50%; difference = 25% [95% CI 8-41]; P = .002) and to have recovered fully (90% vs 74%; difference = 17% [95% CI 5-34]; P = .002) after 1 year. Although physical symptoms were less 1 year after initial emergency department presentation for both groups (P < .001), youth with a repeat concussion reported greater headache persistence (26% vs 13%; difference = 13% [95% CI 1,31]; P = .024). Both groups returned to their normal school routine (100% vs 95%; difference = 5% [95% CI -5 to 8; P = .618). Youth without repeat concussion more frequently returned to normal physical activities (98% vs 85%; difference = 13% [95% CI 4-28]; P < .0001) and sport (95% vs 82%; difference = 13% [95% CI 3-29]; P = .009).ConclusionsMost youth are symptom-free and fully recovered 1 year following concussion. Some children with repeat concussion have worse outcomes and have delays in returning to normal school routines and sport.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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