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Journal Article

Citation

Green SL, Keightley ML, Lobaugh NJ, Dawson DR, Mihailidis A. J. Concussion 2019; 3: e2059700219839588.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/2059700219839588

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background

Concussion represents a growing concern in sports participation for adults and youth alike. Studies exploring the neurocognitive sequelae of concussion, such as speed of processing typically compare mean reaction time scores to a control group. Intraindividual variability measures the consistency of reaction times between trials and has been previously explored in adults post-concussion. Some adult studies show increased variability following injury. Developmentally youth show higher intraindividual variability than adults, which may put them at higher risk of increased intraindividual variability change post-concussion. Exploring intraindividual variability may provide additional insight into fluctuating performance reported following injury. Despite preliminary findings of slowed reaction time in youth, a pre-/post-concussion comparison of intraindividual variability of reaction time has not been explored.

Objective

To describe and compare pre- and post-concussion measures of processing speed and intraindividual variability in youth.
Methods

A pre-/post-concussion design was used to compare mean reaction time and the coefficient of variation before and after sports-related concussion in 18 youth athletes aged 10-14 years using verbal and nonverbal working memory tasks. Pre-/post-concussion reaction time and coefficient of variation were compared using t-tests.

Results

The coefficient of variation for nonverbal working memory was significantly higher following concussion, but no changes in average reaction time were found.

Conclusions

Preliminary findings suggest that average response times are unchanged following concussion, but the fluctuation across response times is more variable during a nonverbal working memory task in youth. Increased variability in speed of reaction times could have implications for safe return to sports and reduced academic performance.

Keywords Concussion, children, cognition, intraindividual variability, processing speed, working memory, sports-related concussion, hockey, adolescent


Language: en

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