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Journal Article

Citation

Rademacher JG, Wingerson MJ, Smulligan KL, Little CC, Wilson JC, Howell DR. J. Sport Rehab. 2023; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Human Kinetics Publishers)

DOI

10.1123/jsr.2023-0022

PMID

37295788

Abstract

CONTEXT: Early physical activity (PA) after concussion may promote symptom resolution. Prior studies have investigated exercise frequency/duration, yet precise PA intensity or volume required for optimal recovery requires further investigation. moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) is beneficial for physical health. We investigated whether sedentary time, light activity time, MVPA time, or activity frequency in the weeks following concussion are associated with time to symptom resolution among adolescents.

DESIGN: Prospective cohort study.

METHODS: Adolescents 10-18 years of age were tested ≤14 days of concussion and followed until symptom resolution. At the initial visit, participants rated symptom severity and were provided wrist-worn activity trackers to monitor PA for the following week. PA behavior was categorized each day based on heart rate: sedentary (resting), light PA (50%-69% age-predicted max heart rate), and MVPA (70%-100% age-predicted max heart rate). Symptom resolution was defined as the date when participants reported cessation of concussion-like symptoms. Patients were not given specific PA instructions, though some may have received instructions from their physician.

RESULTS: Fifty-four participants were included in the study (54% female; mean age = 15.0 [1.8] y; initially assessed 7.5 [3.2] d after concussion). Female athletes recorded more sedentary time (900 [46] vs 738 [185] min/d; P =.01; Cohen d = 0.72), and less time in light PA (194.7 [64.5] vs 224 [55] min/d; P =.08; Cohen d = 0.48) and MVPA (23 [17] vs 38 [31] min/d; P =.04; Cohen d = 0.58) than male athletes. After adjusting for sedentary time, hours per day with >250 steps, sex, and initial symptom severity, more MVPA time was associated with faster symptom resolution time (hazard ratio = 1.016; 95% confidence interval, 1.001-1.032; P =.04).

CONCLUSION: Our findings offer preliminary insight into how varying PA intensities affect concussion recovery, as MVPA may be a higher intensity than what is typically prescribed in concussion care.


Language: en

Keywords

adolescent; recovery; mild traumatic brain injury; aerobic exercise

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