concussions the (not so) good, the bad, the ugly truth

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CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

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Page 1: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

CONCUSSIONSThe (not so) good,

The bad,

The UGLY Truth

Page 2: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

CONCUSSION DEFINED Alteration to mental status Typically caused by a severe head trauma The brain moves violently within the skull Brain cells all fire at once, seizure-like Twisting motion of brain on brain step

Page 3: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

AFFECTS ON BRAIN Attention span Working memory Sustained and selective attention time Inability to problem solve Reaction time

Page 4: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

SYMPTOMS Early-minutes & hours Headache Dizziness or vertigo Lack of awareness of

surroundings Nausea or vomiting

Late days-weeks Persistent low grade headache Light-headedness Poor attention and concentration Memory dysfunction Easy fatigability Irritability and low frustration

tolerance Intolerance of bright lights or

difficulty focusing vision Intolerance of loud noises,

sometimes ringing in the ears Anxiety and/or depressed mood Sleep disturbance

Page 5: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

CONCUSSION GRADES Grade1 concussion symptoms last < 15’

There is no loss of consciousness.

Grade 2 concussion symptoms are > 15’ There is no loss of consciousness.

Grade 3 concussion loss of consciousness for ANY amount of time!

Page 6: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

STATISTICS OF PREVELENCE 2001-2005: ages 5-18 years accounted for 2.4

million ER visits due to sports injury 6% (135,000) involved a concussion.  Sports 2nd leading cause of Traumatic Brain

Injury for 15-24 year olds.

1 in 5 U.S. athletes in contact sport diagnosed with concussion yearly

3.5 million concussion REPORTED yearly At NPHS 17/22 sports are considered contact

Page 7: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

Why aren’t concussion reported? 66% Did not think it was serious enough

41% Did not want to leave the game

36% Did not know it was a concussion

22% Did not want to let down their teammates

Page 8: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

LONG TERM EFFECTS 1 in 1,000 chance for a man between the ages

of 30-49 diagnosed with a memory related disease

NFL retiree has a 1 in 53 chance

Page 9: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

FIELD TESTING (EVALUATION) Orientation Time, Place, Situation Concentration Digits Backwards Memory Recall digits or patterns Physical Test Sprints & calisthenics Neurological Test

Pupils Symmetry Coordination Finger to nose, tandem gait Sensation Romberg Test

Page 10: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

RETURN TO PLAY Grade 1 if asymptomatic after 24 hours Grade 2 if asymptomatic for 1 week Grade 3 if asymptomatic for 2 weeks No repeat of symptoms after exertion Clearance from medical doctor or trained

professional

Page 11: CONCUSSIONS The (not so) good, The bad, The UGLY Truth

CIF 2010 New Bylaw 313 - Concussion Protocol A student-athlete, who is suspected of

sustaining a concussion or head injury in a practice or game,  shall be removed from competition at that time for the remainder of the day.  A student-athlete, who has been removed from play,  may not return to action until the athlete is evaluated by a licensed health care provider trained in the evaluation and management of concussion and receives written clearance to return to play from that health care provider.