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Journal Article

Citation

Helmy A, Agarwal M, Hutchinson PJ. BMJ 2013; 347: f5748.

Affiliation

Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Division of Academic Neurosurgery, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, UK. pjah2@cam.ac.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bmj.f5748

PMID

24068743

Abstract

The diagnosis of concussion and some aspects of its management remain contentious, particularly in the context of continuing to play sport and return to play after concussion. The latest Zurich consensus statement on concussion in sport addresses some of these problems and variations in the definition, clinical assessment, and management of concussion.

Definitions of concussion vary and include mechanistic, pathophysiological, and clinical features.1 These complex definitions are necessary for research but have little practical use for most clinicians, including those “pitch or track side.” A more pragmatic definition of a “traumatically induced, usually transient, disturbance of brain function that involves complex pathophysiological processes” is a diagnosis made in retrospect and provides little help with early clinical decision making.

Some authors use the term concussion synonymously with mild traumatic brain injury (head trauma and Glasgow coma score (GCS) 14 or 15), whereas others consider concussion a distinct pathological phenomenon that lacks any structural abnormality on traditional neuroimaging. In reality, there is likely to be a continuum of brain injury from the mild end of the spectrum, of which concussion is a subset, to more severe injuries. Rotational forces leading to transient distortion of intracerebral tissues seem an important element of the injury mechanism, which partly explains why concussion may be seen with rotational injuries even where there is no impact to the head. Although advanced magnetic resonance imaging can now identify abnormalities in concussed patients, correlation ....


Language: en

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