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Musculoskeletal injury or Sports-Related Concussion (SRC) in a season of rugby union does not affect performance on concussion battery testing in university-aged student-athletes

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posted on 2024-02-15, 15:52 authored by Kerry Glendon, Matthew PainMatthew Pain, Eef HogervorstEef Hogervorst, A Belli, Glen BlenkinsopGlen Blenkinsop

Background: Sub-concussive and concussive impacts sustained during contact sports such as rugby may affect neurocognitive performance, vestibular-ocular-motor function, symptom burden and academic ability. 

Method: Student-athletes (n = 146) participating in rugby union British Universities or domestic competitions were assessed on the Immediate Post-Concussion and Cognitive Test, Post-Concussion Symptom Scale, vestibular-oculo-motor screening tool and revised perceived academic impact tool. Individual change from pre-season (July–September 2021) to 2-weeks following last exposure to contact (April–July 2022) was analysed.

Results: Symptom burden significantly worsened (p=0.016) over the season. Significant improvements on verbal memory (p=0.016), visual memory (p=0.008) and motor processing speed (p=0.001) suggest a possible learning effect. Surprisingly, the number of days lost to concussion significantly and positively affected performance on verbal memory (p = 0.018) and reaction time (p = 0.027). Previous concussive events significantly predicted a worsening in symptom burden (p < 0.028), as did in-season concussive events, predicting improved verbal memory (p = 0.033) and symptom burden change (p = 0.047). Baseline performance significantly affected change on several neurocognitive tests, with low-scorers showing more improvement over the season.

Conclusion: Participation in rugby union was not associated with deleterious effects on brain function. Previous concussive events and in-season factors, possibly related to learning effects, may explain improvement in cognitive function across the season.

Funding

Musculoskeletal Association of Chartered Physiotherapist (Greg Grieve Award)

Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Sports and Exercise Medicine (Research grant)

History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

Physical Therapy in Sport

Volume

65

Pages

137 - 144

Publisher

Elsevier

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© Loughborough University

Publisher statement

This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Acceptance date

2023-12-18

Publication date

2023-12-28

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

1466-853X

eISSN

1873-1600

Language

  • en

Depositor

Kerry Glendon. Deposit date: 14 February 2024