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Journal Article

Citation

Ludwig R, Nelson E, Vaduvathiriyan P, Rippee MA, Siengsukon C. J. Concussion 2021; 5: e20597002211020881.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/20597002211020881

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background
Recovery from a concussion varies based on a multitude of factors. One such factor is sleep disturbances. In our prior review, it was observed that in the acute phase, sleep disturbances are predictive of poor outcomes following a concussion. The literature gap remains on how sleep in the chronic phase of recovery affects outcomes.

Objective
To examine the association between sleep quality during the chronic stage of concussion and post-concussion outcomes.

Literature Survey: Literature searches were performed during 1 July to 1 August 2019 in selected databases along with searching grey literature. Out of the 733 results, 702 references were reviewed after duplicate removal.

Methods
Three reviewers independently reviewed and consented on abstracts meeting eligibility criteria (n = 35). The full-text articles were assessed independently by two reviewers. Consensus was achieved, leaving four articles. Relevant data from each study was extracted using a standard data-extraction table. Quality appraisal was conducted to assess potential bias and the quality of articles.

Results
One study included children (18–60 months) and three studies included adolescents and/or adults (ranging 12–35 years). The association between sleep and cognition (two studies), physical activity (one study), and emotion symptoms (one study) was examined. Sleep quality was associated with decreased cognition and emotional symptoms, but not with meeting physical activity guidelines six months post-concussion injury.

Conclusions
The heterogeneity in age of participants and outcomes across studies and limited number of included studies made interpretations difficult. Future studies may consider if addressing sleep quality following concussion will improve outcomes.


Language: en

Keywords

concussion; mild traumatic brain injury; post-concussion syndrome; recovery; Sleep; systematic review

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