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1 l Modification diagnosis codes indicative of concussion.
2  the direct result of, or be exacerbated by, concussion.
3 urn to school and activities gradually after concussion.
4 urenine metabolites following sports-related concussion.
5 tom exacerbations (spikes) in children after concussion.
6 ate using both in vitro and murine models of concussion.
7 enefits of early physical activity following concussion.
8 n suspected traumatic brain injury (TBI) and concussion.
9 ct, in the absence of a clinically diagnosed concussion.
10  return to play less than 24 hours after the concussion.
11 st enduring physiological deficits following concussion.
12 ld validity for predicting outcome following concussion.
13 ppears greater among those with a history of concussion.
14  and 6 control participants with MCI without concussion.
15     Mechanism and sport-specific activity of concussion.
16 nd related health care utilization rates for concussion.
17 sociated with duration of symptoms following concussion.
18 f symptoms in student athletes who sustain a concussion.
19 ng about return to play after sports-related concussion.
20 ily structure and history of brain injury or concussion.
21 cussion symptoms (PCS) in children following concussion.
22 elationship is not explained by a history of concussion.
23            None of the players experienced a concussion.
24  growing demand for objective evaluations of concussion.
25 f mild traumatic brain injury, also known as concussion.
26 whether or not symptoms were associated with concussion.
27 ge, 1-21 years) since the last self-reported concussion.
28 f multiple abnormal menstrual patterns after concussion.
29 ury currently arouses stronger interest than concussion.
30 aging in the absence of clinically diagnosed concussions.
31 efforts to effectively reduce soccer-related concussions.
32  Test scores, and the number of grade 3 (G3) concussions.
33 .6% of boys' concussions and 25.3% of girls' concussions.
34 symptoms for both sexes was history of prior concussions.
35      Heading the ball accounted for 30.5% of concussions.
36 ental health of athletes who suffer multiple concussions.
37  heading in the prior 12 months and lifetime concussions.
38 ith retired athletes without a history of G3 concussion (1 of 5) older than 63 years (P = .01).
39                 Of the 68 patients who had a concussion, 16 (23.5%) experienced 2 or more abnormal me
40 athletes, 8 of whom had MCI and a history of concussion, 21 cognitively healthy control participants,
41                                              Concussion, a form of mild TBI, might be associated with
42 nts were aged 11 to 18 years and sustained a concussion (according to the Centers for Disease Control
43  our knowledge, little research has examined concussion across the youth/adolescent spectrum and even
44                                 Ten recently concussion adolescents and young adults completed 20 day
45  injury (mTBI), also commonly referred to as concussion, affects millions of Americans annually.
46                             Twelve sustained concussions after baseline testing then completed post-i
47 n in 81 youth athletes (18 with a history of concussion, ages 13-18) during the tests of the Nike Sen
48                  Patients who recovered from concussion also had lower HRQoL than norms at 4 weeks (m
49                                     However, concussions also occur in several other settings, such a
50 lear whether mild traumatic brain injury, or concussion, also confers risk.
51 in US high schools and is a leading cause of concussion among adolescents.
52 ommon mechanism of injury in heading-related concussions among boys (78.1%) and girls (61.9%).
53 s concussions, little research has evaluated concussions among middle-school athletes.
54 33 (1.35-4.04, p = 0.002) for 1 diagnosis of concussion and >1 diagnosis of concussion, respectively,
55              Among the athletes, 17 had a G3 concussion and 11 did not.
56 ed return to play at least 30 days after the concussion and 3.1% resulted in return to play less than
57 tion between HRQoL and PPCS at 4 weeks after concussion and assess the degree of impairment of HRQoL
58 sociation between sustaining a sport-related concussion and cognitive impairment later in life.
59                                 Diagnoses of concussion and control diagnoses of broken limb bones we
60 es in serum proteins following sport-related concussion and determine whether candidate biomarkers di
61  presenting to the emergency department with concussion and head injury within the previous 48 hours
62 ry is a primary neuropathological feature of concussion and is thought to greatly contribute to the c
63 e neurocognitive sequelae of a sport-related concussion and its management are poorly defined.
64  but no objective test reliably identifies a concussion and its severity.
65                                              Concussion and mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) are int
66  linked to conversations about sport-related concussion and mild traumatic brain injury.
67 calable biological marker for sports-related concussion and other types of mild traumatic brain injur
68 sociation between sustaining a sport-related concussion and poorer cognitive function later in life i
69                                              Concussion and subconcussive impacts have been associate
70 prospective evidence of reduced CBF in human concussion and subsequent recovery.
71 lationship between long-term consequences of concussion and the function of the hypothalamic-pituitar
72 d patient populations (ie, those affected by concussion and those affected by various degrees of trau
73               History of clinician-diagnosed concussion and years of football experience.
74 re was a significant inverse relationship of concussion and years of football played with hippocampal
75 fic activity, responsible for 30.6% of boys' concussions and 25.3% of girls' concussions.
76 nts included sprains and strains, fractures, concussions and bleeding.
77  compared with less severe injuries, such as concussions and cranial fractures, more severe injuries,
78 GROUND AND The relationship between repeated concussions and neurodegenerative disease has received s
79 o significant associations between number of concussions and performance on cognitive tests.
80        Until now, the interacting effects of concussions and the normal ageing process on white matte
81 ed by sex, age at death, severity (including concussion), and different follow-up times after diagnos
82 use of a recovery position, recognition of a concussion, and 6 other first aid topics.
83 tive diagnostic biomarkers for sport-related concussion, and inflammatory markers may provide prognos
84  protein B were measured immediately after a concussion, and they decreased during rehabilitation.
85 l injuries regardless of severity, including concussions, and athlete exposure information were docum
86                       The effects of TBI and concussion are not restricted to cognition and balance.
87                                        While concussions are recognized etiological factors for a spe
88 ld likely be a more effective way to prevent concussions as well as other injuries.
89 l neurocognitive testing with Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT).
90 urocognitive testing with the Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing evaluation w
91 on symptom scale), cognition (Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing), and balanc
92 s has a potential clinical utility of proper concussion assessment and management.
93 linical preseason baseline testing regarding concussion assessment measures.
94                              The Child Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT3) is a postconcussion s
95    Football practices were a major source of concussion at all 3 levels of competition.
96 l volume compared with athletes without a G3 concussion at the 40th percentile (P = .03), 60th percen
97 d injury models are important tools to study concussion biomechanics but are impractical for real-wor
98 tic brain injury (mTBI), also referred to as concussion, can result in chronic post-concussive syndro
99 with more Medicaid patients using the ED for concussion care (478/1290 Medicaid patients [37%] used t
100 he importance of the primary care setting in concussion care management, and demonstrate the potentia
101                                              Concussions carry devastating potential for cognitive, n
102 cessing of sound correctly identifies 90% of concussion cases and clears 95% of control cases, sugges
103 I; eg, sports concussions), whether repeated concussions cause long-term cognitive deficits remains c
104 tic brain injury (mTBI, often referred to as concussion) causes differential mitochondrial responses
105 erity, cognition (Standardized Assessment of Concussion-child version [SAC-C]), and balance (modified
106 ts (5-17 years) presenting to three tertiary concussion clinics between April 2018 and March 2019.
107 d to patient populations presenting to sport concussion clinics or to emergency departments (EDs) and
108 e first study to show an association between concussion, cognition, and anatomical structural brain c
109                                              Concussions comprised 9.6%, 4.0%, and 8.0% of all injuri
110                    All eligible patients had concussions consistent with the Zurich consensus diagnos
111                                              Concussion cumulative incidence, incidence rate, and des
112 opathological evaluation of a swine model of concussion demonstrated a notably similar pattern of axo
113                            In current usage 'concussion' describes a clinical presentation, but does
114  such as facilitating head impact sensors in concussion detection via a mobile device.
115            Specifically, we hypothesize that concussions disrupt the processing of the fundamental fr
116                          We hypothesize that concussions disrupt these auditory processes, and that t
117       Twenty-three were not diagnosed with a concussion during the season and completed both baseline
118                                              Concussions during practice might be mitigated and shoul
119 n Symptoms Questionnaire scores and lifetime concussion events (rho = 0.58, P = .02 and rho = 0.52, P
120   Here we show that children who sustained a concussion exhibit a signature neural profile.
121 es without concussions, former athletes with concussions exhibited widespread white matter anomalies
122 ely one-third of children experiencing acute concussion experience ongoing somatic, cognitive, and ps
123  and psychosocial functioning in relation to concussion exposure and apolipoprotein epsilon4 status.
124 rmance on these measures was associated with concussion exposure.
125  biomechanics at the micro- and mesoscale of concussion, few have addressed the multiscale transmissi
126                       Even in the absence of concussion, football players may experience repeated BBB
127 control group of 15 retired athletes without concussions, former athletes with concussions exhibited
128 age in 15 retired athletes with a history of concussions, free of comorbid medical conditions.
129 adolescents aged 5.00-17.99 years with acute concussion from 9 Pediatric Emergency Research Canada ne
130                    Thirty-five players had a concussion from September 13, 2012, to January 31, 2013;
131                      Clearly differentiating concussion from traumatic brain injury is essential to a
132                    Importance: Recovery from concussion generally follows a trajectory of gradual imp
133    Older retired athletes with at least 1 G3 concussion had significantly smaller bilateral hippocamp
134        Players with and without a history of concussion had smaller hippocampal volumes relative to h
135                    Players with a history of concussion had smaller hippocampal volumes than players
136  former college players with more than three concussions had lower FA in a broadly distributed area o
137 erved: Nonspeed players with more than three concussions had lower FA in frontal white matter compare
138                        Over the past decade, concussion has become the most widely discussed injury i
139           Previous epidemiologic research on concussions has primarily been limited to patient popula
140 rial changes in regional CBF following human concussion have yet to be performed.
141                               Sports-related concussions have been shown to lead to persistent subcli
142                                     Lifetime concussion history and demographic features were not sig
143 .5 [8] vs 60.24 [7]; P = .002); those with a concussion history and MCI performed worse (mean [SD], 3
144 D PSC revealed a similar interaction between concussion history and position (all adjusted P < .004).
145               A separate interaction between concussion history and position was observed: Nonspeed p
146                        Retired athletes with concussion history but without cognitive impairment had
147 ive PSD ratio was significantly lower in the concussion history group on the tests of target capture,
148 ferences between athletes with and without a concussion history on 5 cognitive measures but did show
149 aying position seem to modify the effects of concussion history on white matter structure and neural
150 cant interaction between career duration and concussion history was observed; former college players
151 ross three crossed factors: career duration, concussion history, and primary playing position.
152 hanges in those with a history of mTBI (i.e. concussion), however, have not been consistently reporte
153 edical care of children and adolescents with concussion (ie, the Lystedt Law), with all other states
154 ectral density (PSD) ratio to the history of concussion in 81 youth athletes (18 with a history of co
155                                              Concussion in adolescence was associated with a raised r
156 There is continuing concern about effects of concussion in athletes, including risk of the neurodegen
157 Child SCAT3 scores for young athletes with a concussion in athletic and clinical settings.
158                            To assess whether concussion in childhood or adolescence is associated wit
159 notable association with MS was observed for concussion in childhood, or broken limb bones in childho
160 re symptomology and prolonged recovery after concussion in children and adolescents.
161 and at 24 to 48 hours (late acute) following concussion in football players (n = 106), matched uninju
162                               Sports-related concussion in professional ice hockey players is associa
163                        Understanding whether concussion in sport is associated with worsening cogniti
164  differences across states, rates of treated concussion in states without legislation were 7% higher
165  had 1 or more in-person clinical visits for concussion in the CHOP unified electronic health record
166  958 high school athletes from Maine with no concussion in the past 6 months who completed a preseaso
167 h care utilization rates among children with concussion in the United States are both directly and in
168                      The estimated number of concussions in RIRP averaged 14 (median=7; IQR 5-40).
169                     Despite a high number of concussions in RIRP, differences in mental health, socia
170 ify network activity changes after simulated concussions in vitro and therewith develop a platform fo
171            The findings suggest estimates of concussion incidence based solely on ED visits underesti
172 Medicine called for comprehensive nationwide concussion incidence data across the spectrum of athlete
173                                   Cumulative concussion incidence was 13.0% per season, and the incid
174                                              Concussion is frequently undiagnosed as a cause of psych
175 s on traumatic brain injury and assumes that concussion is merely a mild form of traumatic brain inju
176 jor impediment to improving the treatment of concussion is our current inability to identify patients
177 sulted in a lack of understanding about what concussion is, and how to diagnose, monitor, and treat i
178  presenting with a history of sports-related concussions is linked to diffuse white matter abnormalit
179  Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI, cerebral concussion) is a risk factor for the development of psyc
180              Mild traumatic brain injury, or concussion, is associated with a range of neural changes
181          During the same period, states with concussion laws demonstrated a 10% higher concussion-rel
182 ion legislation, and (3) the effect of state concussion laws on trends in states with concussion legi
183  from the Veterans Affairs-Boston University-Concussion Legacy Foundation and Framingham Heart Study
184                                              Concussion legislation has had a seemingly positive effe
185 ate concussion laws on trends in states with concussion legislation in effect by means of negative bi
186 (2) postlegislation trends in states without concussion legislation, and (3) the effect of state conc
187  are both directly and indirectly related to concussion legislation.
188 pite recent increased awareness about sports concussions, little research has evaluated concussions a
189 tes has passed legislation for sport-related concussion, making this health issue important for physi
190 cations, monitoring menstrual patterns after concussion may be warranted in this population.
191 tact with another player was the most common concussion mechanism.
192 lso increased in players with sports-related concussion(median, 0.075 mug/L; range, 0.037-0.24 mug/L)
193 ential confounders including age, sex, prior concussions, migraine, anxiety, learning disability, dep
194  kynurenine levels would correlate with post-concussion mood symptoms.
195 egiate football players without a history of concussion (n = 25), and non-football-playing, age-, sex
196 layers with a history of clinician-diagnosed concussion (n = 25), collegiate football players without
197 lescent and young women with a sport-related concussion (n = 68) or a nonhead sport-related orthopedi
198 at 1-week (N=14; 9.29 days) and 1-month post-concussion (N=14, 30.93 days).
199 t the frequency-following response indicates concussion occurrence and severity.
200 ntional research should target the effect of concussion on HRQoL.
201                                Sport-related concussion or nonhead sport-related orthopedic injury.
202 in 30 days after a sport-related injury to a concussion or sports medicine clinic at a single academi
203                   There was no evidence that concussion or vision symptom trajectories varied over ti
204                                     Multiple concussions or even a single moderate to severe TBI can
205 e development of AD pathology after repeated concussions or TBI.
206 rovided an independent measure of real-world concussion outcome (ie, number of days withheld from com
207       Finally, concussed athletes with worse concussion outcome, defined as number of days until retu
208 were more common if reporting more than nine concussions (p=0.028), although these symptoms were not
209                           Among 637 eligible concussion patients, 155 (24%) reported pre-existing anx
210 53 athlete exposures (AEs) among girls (4.50 concussions per 10,000 AEs), and 442 concussions were su
211 tained during 1,592,238 AEs among boys (2.78 concussions per 10,000 AEs).
212 g participants aged 5 to 18 years with acute concussion, physical activity within 7 days of acute inj
213 likely have immediate repercussion on sports concussion prevention and management policy and sporting
214  main outcome measure was the Rivermead Post-Concussion Questionnaire-16 (RPQ-16) collected before co
215 concussion rate was higher than the practice concussion rate across all 3 competitive levels.
216                                     The game concussion rate for college athletes (3.74 per 1000 athl
217                                 The practice concussion rate in college (0.53 per 1000 athlete exposu
218                                     The game concussion rate was higher than the practice concussion
219                                              Concussion rates in young female soccer players are grea
220  air with his or her head) given the rise in concussion rates, with some calling for a ban on heading
221  better understand individual differences in concussion recovery.
222 er NFL players with and without a history of concussion recruited from the North Texas region and age
223  from youth soccer would likely prevent some concussions, reducing athlete-athlete contact across all
224            Baseline scores on a computerized concussion-related cognitive battery were used for cogni
225 ut legislation had a 75% overall increase in concussion-related health care utilization during the sa
226  the following: (1) prelegislation trends in concussion-related health care utilization from January
227 th concussion laws demonstrated a 10% higher concussion-related health care utilization rate compared
228 th legislation experienced a 92% increase in concussion-related health care utilization, while states
229                  The study evaluated whether concussion-related neurophysiological impairments were d
230 olescent spectrum and even less has examined concussion-related outcomes (ie, symptoms and return to
231                               Differences in concussion-related outcomes existed by level of competit
232  differences or level-specific variations in concussion-related policies and protocols, athlete train
233 r of impacts to the head or neck followed by concussion-related symptoms, exhibited greater dual task
234 o were > 28 days postconcussion, had chronic concussion-related symptoms, had normal visual acuity, a
235                                  The initial concussion-related visit was selected and variation in t
236     Safely returning athletes to sport after concussion relies on accurately determining when their s
237 rkers are more efficient at deciphering post-concussion residual neurocognitive deficits and thus has
238  diagnosis of concussion and >1 diagnosis of concussion, respectively, compared with none.
239                                              Concussion resulted in significantly increased amplitude
240                                 The 1-season concussion risk was highest in high school (9.98%) and c
241       Youth football had the lowest 1-season concussion risks in 2012 (3.53%) and 2013 (3.13%).
242 nsitive approach for sideline or post-injury concussion screening.
243  conflicts, mTBI patients with even a single concussion showed a significant slow-down in all respons
244 rise the evidence on the association between concussion sustained by professional/elite athletes and
245                                              Concussions sustained during high school-sanctioned socc
246                   Primary outcomes were mean concussion symptom and vision symptom severity scores me
247 r conceptualizing, collecting, and analyzing concussion symptom data.
248 re persistent symptoms on the validated Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory at 4 weeks.
249  (>/=3 new or worsening symptoms on the Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory) was assessed at 28 days po
250                There were few differences in concussion symptom patterns by injury mechanism.
251                  Secondary outcomes, time to concussion symptom recovery and time to return to academ
252                                        Total concussion symptom scores varied from 2 to 97 (mean +/-
253                   In the absence of a recent concussion, symptom reporting is related to sex and pree
254             Better characterization of acute concussion symptomatology is needed in order to advance
255 d a number of idiosyncratic features of post-concussion symptomatology.
256         To identify predictors of persistent concussion symptoms (PCS) in children following concussi
257 uency partially recover to control levels as concussion symptoms abate, suggesting a gain in biologic
258 ted an additional 2.64 (95% CI 1.84 to 3.44) concussion symptoms and 7.45 (95% CI 5.22 to 9.68) highe
259                     We inquired weekly about concussion symptoms and, if present, the symptom type an
260 he temporal and structural dynamics of acute concussion symptoms at the individual-patient level.
261 ayers were also assessed with Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire and magnetic resonance
262 oncentrations correlated with Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire scores and lifetime co
263      Compared with youth, a higher number of concussion symptoms were reported in high school athlete
264 ury, general and mental health, life stress, concussion symptoms, cognitive function, disability and
265 cological momentary assessment (EMA) of post-concussion symptoms.
266 d function that occur independently of overt concussion symptoms.
267 l and scientific understanding of persistent concussion symptoms.
268 useful therapeutically in acute TBI and post-concussion syndrome.
269  matter compared with those with zero to one concussion (t25 = 3.861; adjusted P = .002).
270  matter compared with those with zero to one concussion (t29 = 2.774; adjusted P = .037), and the opp
271 ler hippocampal volumes than players without concussion (t48 = 3.15; P < .001; mean difference, 761 m
272 ce, 1788 muL; 95% CI, 1317-2258 muL; without concussion: t48 = 4.35; P < .001, mean difference, 1027
273 lative to healthy control participants (with concussion: t48 = 7.58; P < .001; mean difference, 1788
274 was significantly higher among patients with concussion than among those with an orthopedic injury (o
275 or ability in the athletes with a history of concussion that may have implications for diagnosis, reh
276                                        Prior concussion that results in loss of consciousness is a ri
277 symptom, and the proportion of patients with concussions that had long return-to-play time (ie, requi
278  is the most common activity associated with concussions, the most frequent mechanism was athlete-ath
279 njury as a likely pathological substrate for concussion, thereby providing a framework to develop tru
280 e of traumatic brain injury (TBI), from mild concussion to severe, penetrating injury.
281                         Importance: Although concussion treatment guidelines advocate rest in the imm
282                                 By examining concussion visits across an entire pediatric health care
283                         Frequency of initial concussion visits at each type of health care location.
284                                              Concussion visits in the EHR were defined based on Inter
285 y prognosticators of PCS following pediatric concussion was conducted.
286 mpal volume in retired athletes with MCI and concussion was significantly smaller compared with contr
287  injury and were considered to have an acute concussion were enrolled across 9 pediatric emergency de
288   In RIRP, persisting symptoms attributed to concussion were more common if reporting more than nine
289                Athletes with a history of G3 concussion were more likely to have MCI (7 of 7) compare
290                 Overall, 1429 sports-related concussions were reported among youth, high school, and
291                                 Overall, 627 concussions were sustained during 1,393,753 athlete expo
292 s (4.50 concussions per 10,000 AEs), and 442 concussions were sustained during 1,592,238 AEs among bo
293 hological patterns consistent with models of concussion wherein brainstem white matter tracts undergo
294 ld traumatic brain injury (rmTBI; eg, sports concussions), whether repeated concussions cause long-te
295 tors have yet to evaluate the association of concussion with menstrual patterns in young women.
296  physician-diagnosed migraine history, prior concussion with symptoms lasting longer than 1 week, hea
297 escent and young women after a sport-related concussion with those after sport-related orthopedic inj
298  Among the 351 soccer players, there were 59 concussions with 43 742 athletic exposure hours.
299 wer leg injury within the past 2 months or a concussion within the past month.
300  compared with those who have recovered from concussion, yet deficits in HRQoL are pervasive across a

 
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