Individual Impact Magnitude vs. Cumulative Magnitude for Estimating Concussion Odds

被引:0
|
作者
Kathryn L. O’Connor
Thomas Peeters
Stefan Szymanski
Steven P. Broglio
机构
[1] University of Michigan School of Kinesiology,NeuroTrauma Research Laboratory
[2] Erasmus School of Economics,NeuroTrauma Research Laboratory, University of Michigan Injury Center
[3] University of Michigan School of Kinesiology,undefined
[4] University of Michigan School of Kinesiology,undefined
来源
关键词
Head impact; Concussion; Biomechanics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Helmeted impact devices have allowed researchers to investigate the biomechanics of head impacts in vivo. While increased impact magnitude has been associated with greater concussion risk, a definitive concussive threshold has not been established. It is likely that concussion risk is not determined by a single impact itself, but a host of predisposing factors. These factors may include genetics, fatigue, and/or prior head impact exposure. The objective of the current paper is to investigate the association between cumulative head impact magnitude and concussion risk. It is hypothesized that increased cumulative magnitudes will be associated with greater concussion risk. This retrospective analysis included participants that were recruited from regional high-schools in Illinois and Michigan from 2007 to 2014 as part of an ongoing study on concussion biomechanics. Across seven seasons, 185 high school football athletes were instrumented with the Head Impact Telemetry system. Out of 185 athletes, 31 (17%) sustained a concussion, with two athletes sustaining two concussions over the study period, yielding 33 concussive events. The system recorded 78,204 impacts for all concussed players. Linear acceleration, rotational acceleration, and head impact telemetry severity profile (HITsp) magnitudes were summed within five timeframes: the day of injury, three days prior to injury, seven days prior to injury, 30 days prior to injury, and prior in-season exposure. Logistic regressions were modeled to explain concussive events based on the singular linear acceleration, rotational acceleration, and HITsp event along with the calculated summations over time. Linear acceleration, rotational acceleration, and HITsp all produced significant models estimating concussion (p < 0.05). The strongest estimators of a concussive impact were the linear acceleration (OR = 1.040, p < 0.05), rotational acceleration (OR = 1.001, p < 0.05), and HITsp (OR = 1.003, p < 0.05) for the singular impact rather than any of the cumulative magnitude calculations. Moreover, no cumulative count measure was significant for linear or rotational acceleration. Results from this investigation support the growing literature indicating cumulative magnitude is not related to concussion likelihood. Cumulative magnitude is a simplistic measure of the total exposure sustained by a player over a given period. However, this measure is limited as it assumes the brain is a static structure unable to undergo self-repair. Future research should consider how biological recovery between impacts may influence concussion risk.
引用
收藏
页码:1985 / 1992
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Individual Impact Magnitude vs. Cumulative Magnitude for Estimating Concussion Odds
    O'Connor, Kathryn L.
    Peeters, Thomas
    Szymanski, Stefan
    Broglio, Steven P.
    ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 2017, 45 (08) : 1985 - 1992
  • [2] The nature of magnitude integration: contextual interference vs. active magnitude binding
    Togoli, Irene
    Bueti, Domenica
    Fornaciai, Michele
    PERCEPTION, 2021, 50 (1_SUPPL) : 27 - 28
  • [3] Rank distributions: Frequency vs. magnitude
    Velarde, Carlos
    Robledo, Alberto
    PLOS ONE, 2017, 12 (10):
  • [4] Fuzzy techniques for impact locating and magnitude estimating
    Shan, Q
    King, G
    INSIGHT, 2003, 45 (03) : 190 - 195
  • [5] Dendrogeomorphic dating vs. low-magnitude landsliding
    Fabianova, Andrea
    Chalupa, Vladimir
    Silhan, Karel
    QUATERNARY GEOCHRONOLOGY, 2021, 62
  • [6] On the discounting of cannabis and money: Sensitivity to magnitude vs. delay
    Jarmolowicz, David P.
    Reed, Derek D.
    Stancato, Stefanie S.
    Lemley, Shea M.
    Sofis, Michael J.
    Fox, Andrew
    Martin, Laura E.
    DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE, 2020, 212
  • [7] Visual sense of number vs. sense of magnitude in humans and machines
    Alberto Testolin
    Serena Dolfi
    Mathijs Rochus
    Marco Zorzi
    Scientific Reports, 10
  • [8] Intuitions of "infinite numbers": Infinite magnitude vs. infinite representation
    Mamolo, Ami
    MATHEMATICS ENTHUSIAST, 2009, 6 (03):
  • [9] Visual sense of number vs. sense of magnitude in humans and machines
    Testolin, Alberto
    Dolfi, Serena
    Rochus, Mathijs
    Zorzi, Marco
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [10] Magnitude of Head Impact Exposures in Individual Collegiate Football Players
    Crisco, Joseph J.
    Wilcox, Bethany J.
    Machan, Jason T.
    McAllister, Thomas W.
    Duhaime, Ann-Christine
    Duma, Stefan M.
    Rowson, Steven
    Beckwith, Jonathan G.
    Chu, Jeffrey J.
    Greenwald, Richard M.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED BIOMECHANICS, 2012, 28 (02) : 174 - 183