TY - JOUR
PY - 2022//
TI - Association of multidomain assessment outcomes with referral for vestibular therapy following concussion
JO - Journal of athletic training
A1 - Eagle, Shawn R.
A1 - Mucha, Anne
A1 - Trbovich, Alicia
A1 - Manderino, Lisa
A1 - Elbin, R. J.
A1 - Collins, Michael W.
A1 - Kontos, Anthony P.
SP - ePub
EP - ePub
VL - ePub
IS - ePub
N2 - CONTEXT: Multiple aspects of a multidomain assessment have been validated for identifying concussion, however, researchers have yet to determine which components are related to referral for vestibular therapy.
OBJECTIVE: To identify which variables from a multidomain assessment were associated with receiving a referral for vestibular therapy following a concussion.
DESIGN: Retrospective chart review, level of evidence 3. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: Participants (n=331; age: 16.9±7.2; 39.3% female) were diagnosed with a concussion per international consensus criteria by a clinical neuropsychologist after presenting to a concussion specialty clinic. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Medical chart data was extracted from the first clinical visit regarding pre-injury medical history, computerized neurocognition, Post-Concussion Symptom Scale (PCSS), Concussion Clinical Profiles Screen (CP-Screen) and Vestibular Ocular Motor Screening (VOMS) within 16.2±46.7 days of injury. Five backwards logistic regression models were built to associate the outcomes from each of the five included assessments with referral for vestibular therapy. A final logistic regression model was built using variables retained in the previous five models as potential predictors of referral for vestibular therapy.
RESULTS: The five models built from individual components of the multidomain assessment predicted referral for vestibular therapy (R2= 0.01-0.28) with 1 to 6 statistically significant variables. The final multivariate model (R2= 0.40) retained 9 significant variables, represented by each of the five multidomain assessments except neurocognition. Variables with the strongest association to vestibular therapy referral were motor vehicle accident mechanism of injury (odds ratio [OR]=15.45), migraine history (OR=3.25), increased headache when concentrating (OR=1.81) and horizontal vestibular ocular reflex (OR=1.63).
CONCLUSIONS: The present study demonstrates the utility of a multidomain assessment, and identifies outcomes associated with a referral for vestibular therapy following a concussion.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1062-6050 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.4085/1062-6050-0032.22 ID - ref1 ER -