TY - JOUR
PY - 2014//
TI - Brain or strain? Symptoms alone do not distinguish physiologic concussion from cervical/vestibular injury
JO - Clinical journal of sport medicine
A1 - Leddy, John J.
A1 - Baker, John G.
A1 - Merchant, Asim
A1 - Picano, John
A1 - Gaile, Daniel
A1 - Matuszak, Jason
A1 - Willer, Barry
SP - 237
EP - 242
VL - 25
IS - 3
N2 - OBJECTIVE:: To compare symptoms in patients with physiologic postconcussion disorder (PCD) versus cervicogenic/vestibular PCD. We hypothesized that most symptoms would not be equivalent. In particular, we hypothesized that cognitive symptoms would be more often associated with physiologic PCD.
DESIGN:: Retrospective review of symptom reports from patients who completed a 22-item symptom questionnaire. SETTING:: University-based concussion clinic. PATIENTS:: Convenience sample of 128 patients who had symptoms after head injury for more than 3 weeks and who had provocative treadmill exercise testing. INDEPENDENT VARIABLES:: Subjects were classified as either physiologic PCD (abnormal treadmill performance and a normal cervical/vestibular physical examination) or cervicogenic/vestibular PCD (CGV, normal treadmill performance, and an abnormal cervical/vestibular physical examination). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:: Self-reported symptoms. Univariate and multivariate methods, including t tests, tests of equivalence, a logistic regression model, k-nearest neighbor analysis, multidimensional scaling, and principle components analysis were used to see whether symptoms could distinguish PCD from CGV.
RESULTS:: None of the statistical methods used to analyze self-reported symptoms was able to adequately distinguish patients with PCD from patients with CGV.
CONCLUSIONS:: Symptoms after head injury, including cognitive symptoms, have traditionally been ascribed to brain injury, but they do not reliably discriminate between physiologic PCD and cervicogenic/vestibular PCD. Clinicians should consider specific testing of exercise tolerance and perform a physical examination of the cervical spine and the vestibular/ocular systems to determine the etiology of postconcussion symptoms. CLINICAL RELEVANCE:: Symptoms after head injury, including cognitive symptoms, do not discriminate between concussion and cervical/vestibular injury.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1050-642X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/JSM.0000000000000128 ID - ref1 ER -