TY - JOUR PY - 2021// TI - Use of the Sports Concussion Assessment Tool 3 in emergency department patients with psychiatric disease JO - Journal of head trauma rehabilitation A1 - Coscia, Atticus A1 - Stolz, Uwe A1 - Barczak, Christopher A1 - Wright, Natalie A1 - Mittermeyer, Stephan A1 - Shams, Tanzid A1 - Epstein, Stephen A1 - Kreitzer, Natalie SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - OBJECTIVE: The Sports Concussion Assessment Tool 3 (SCAT3) Symptom Evaluation (SE) is used in the emergency department (ED). This study aimed to examine the effects of psychiatric history on the SCAT3 SE symptom severity score (SSS). SETTING: Three US EDs. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 272 ED patients with suspected concussion.

DESIGN: Prospective, nonrandomized, nonblinded study. The SCAT3 SE SSS, demographic data, medical information, and self-reported psychiatric history were obtained from patients by clinical research staff when they presented to the ED seeking standard clinical care. Concussion diagnoses were determined following a comprehensive assessment by an ED physician trained in managing concussions and adjudicated by supervising physicians. MAIN MEASURES: The primary outcome measure was SSS. The association between SSS, self-reported psychiatric disease, and concussion diagnosis was analyzed using multivariable linear regression.

RESULTS: 68.4% of subjects were diagnosed with a concussion. After controlling for age, sex, race, history of previous concussion, and interval from injury to ED presentation, self-reported psychiatric history (adjusted regression coefficient (βa): 16.9; confidence interval [CI]: 10.1, 23.6), and concussion diagnosis (βa: 21.7; CI: 14.2, 29.2) were both independently associated with a significant increase in SSS. Subjects with a history of concussion had a significantly higher SSS (βa: 9.1; CI: 1.8, 16.5). Interval from injury to ED presentation was also associated with a significant increase in SSS (βa: 1.6 per 6-hour increase; CI: 0.4, 2.8).

CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate that a history of preexisting psychiatric disease, as self-reported by patients with a suspected concussion treated in the ED, is independently associated with significantly higher scores on the SCAT3 SE. This suggests that a history of psychiatric illness may need to be accounted for when the SCAT3 SE is used in the ED for the assessment of concussion.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0885-9701 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/HTR.0000000000000648 ID - ref1 ER -