Publications by authors named "William Meehan"

Article Synopsis
  • A study aimed to explore the links between running biomechanics and the musculotendinous characteristics of adolescent runners, as well as changes in these properties over a period of six months.
  • Thirty-three adolescents participated, undergoing ultrasound evaluations and wearable sensor assessments to analyze different muscle and tendon attributes and running mechanics.
  • Results showed that specific biomechanics, like pronation and contact time, significantly predicted changes in muscle and tendon thickness, highlighting potential influences of running mechanics on physical development in young athletes.
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Article Synopsis
  • A study investigated the impact of aerobic exercise on reducing musculoskeletal (MSK) injuries in adolescent athletes recovering from sport-related concussions (SRC) within 10 days post-injury.
  • Results showed that only 5.3% of those who did aerobic exercise experienced MSK injuries, compared to 24% of those who did stretching exercises.
  • The findings suggest that aerobic exercise may aid recovery and reduce the risk of injury, potentially by enhancing various physiological functions post-concussion.
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Background: Legal performance enhancing substance (PES) use is increasing in young athletes and may lead to banned PES use. This study examines legal PES use and consideration of banned PES use in young athletes with a season-ending injury (SEI) compared to young athletes with non-SEI/no previous injury.

Hypothesis: Young athletes sustaining SEI or concussions have increased odds of reporting legal PES use and consideration of banned PES use compared with non-SEI or no injury.

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Article Synopsis
  • Research indicates a higher prevalence of upper lumbar spondylolysis in young athletes than previously thought, highlighting a lack of sport-specific studies on this condition.
  • The study aimed to identify risk factors associated with upper lumbar stress injuries in pediatric and adolescent athletes by reviewing medical records from two academic centers.
  • Results showed that the majority of diagnosed athletes had lower level injuries, while a smaller percentage experienced upper level injuries, which were linked to being older at diagnosis and shorter durations of low back pain.
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Context: Understanding former professional football players engagement with health promoting behaviors (physical exercise, high quality diet, and good sleep hygiene) will be helpful for developing lifestyle interventions to improve their feelings of well-being, a relatively understudied facet of health among this population.

Objective: Examine associations among health-promoting behaviors and subjective outcomes related to well-being among former National Football League (NFL) players.

Design: Cross-sectional.

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Purpose: Our purpose was to represent a rare cohort of female collision sport athletes and investigate the association between sport type (collision, contact, and noncontact), symptoms, and performance on baseline neurocognitive assessments.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study using baseline computerized neurocognitive scores (Immediate Postconcussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing [ImPACT]) of 75,128 female high school student-athletes (age, 15.27 ± 1.

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  • Previous studies indicated that spondylolysis mainly affects the L5 and L4 levels, with minimal occurrences at higher levels, but recent findings show that MRI is as effective as CT for early detection without radiation risks.
  • The hypothesis suggests that using MRI more frequently might uncover more cases of spondylolysis at upper spinal levels, which were underreported.
  • A study investigated medical records of 902 young athletes, revealing that most stress injuries were lower lumbar, but 9.1% were found at or above the L3 level, highlighting the significance of sport participation and symptom duration.
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Article Synopsis
  • * Methods: A retrospective review was conducted on 363 adolescent athletes with LBP at Boston Children's Hospital, analyzing data from 2015 to 2020 using statistical tests for associations.
  • * Results: The most common diagnosis was non-specific LBP (34%), followed by spondylolysis (28%), with differences noted in diagnosis based on sex, particularly for facet-joint and SI-joint related pain, highlighting the need for better diagnostic methods and management guidelines tailored for this group.
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Objective: Approximately 20% of students with sport-related concussion (SRC) report new symptoms of anxiety and depression which may be associated with delayed recovery and increased risk for developing a mood disorder. Early prescribed aerobic exercise facilitates recovery in athletes with concussion-related exercise intolerance. We studied the effect of aerobic exercise treatment on new mood symptoms early after SRC.

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Objectives: We investigated the acoustic startle reflex in recently concussed adolescent athletes compared to healthy controls and those with concussion history (>1 year prior) but no current symptoms. We hypothesized that individuals with recent concussion would have a suppressed startle response compared to healthy controls.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study on 49 adolescent athletes with a recent concussion (n = 20; age: 14.

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Repetitive mild traumatic brain injury (rmTBI, e.g., sports concussions) may be associated with both acute and chronic symptoms and neurological changes.

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Objective: To compare clinical measures between patients with chronic exertional compartment syndrome (CECS) and healthy controls and evaluate running biomechanics, physical measurements, and exertional intracompartmental (ICP) changes in adolescent athletes with lower leg CECS.

Design: Cross-sectional case-control study.

Setting: Large tertiary care hospital and affiliated injury prevention center.

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Background: Outdoor races introduce environmental stressors to runners, and core temperature changes may influence runners' movement patterns. This study assessed changes and determined relationships between sensor-derived running biomechanics and core temperature among runners across an 11.27-km road race.

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Background: Understanding the challenges and potential of telehealth visits (THVs) in a large population can inform future practice and policy discussion for pediatric orthopaedic and sports medicine (OSM) care. We comprehensively assess telehealth challenges and potential in a large pediatric OSM population based on access, visit completion, patient satisfaction, and technological challenges.

Methods: Demographics, address, insurance, visit information, patient feedback, experience with video visits, and technical challenges of all 2019 to 2020 visits at our hospital were assessed (3,278,006 visits).

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Impairment in visual function is common after traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the clinical setting, a phenomenon that translates to pre-clinical animal models as well. In Morris et al. (2021), we reported histological changes following weight-drop-induced TBI in a rodent model including retinal ganglion cell (RGC) loss, decreased electroretinogram (ERG) evoked potential, optic nerve diameter reduction, induced inflammation and gliosis, and loss of myelin accompanied by markedly impaired visual acuity.

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Introduction/purpose: There is a well-established association between preexisting depression/anxiety and greater postconcussion symptom burden, but the potential impact of antidepressant medications has not been fully explored. The primary objective of this study was to compare preinjury/baseline and postinjury concussion symptom scores and neurocognitive performance of athletes on antidepressant medications, both with healthy controls and with those with depression/anxiety not on antidepressants.

Methods: This is a cross-sectional study using data collected from 49,270 junior and high school athletes from computerized neurocognitive assessments (Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Test [ImPACT]) administered between 2009 and 2018 held by the Massachusetts Concussion Management Coalition.

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Introduction: Literature indicating that transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) may enable the brain to recover normal function after concussion, resulting in symptoms reduction, and improved cognitive function after concussion is limited by small sample sizes and lack of controls.

Methods: We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial examining the effect of 6 wk of tPBM in patients 11 yr or older who received care for persistent postconcussion symptoms between September 2012 and December 2015. Our primary outcome measure was the mean difference in Postconcussion Symptom Scale total score and the raw Immediate Postconcussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing composite scores between study entry and treatment completion.

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Background: Aerobic exercise facilitates postconcussion symptom resolution at the group level, but patient-level characteristics may affect the likelihood of treatment efficacy.

Purpose: This study aimed to investigate demographic and clinical characteristics, which differentiate postconcussion aerobic exercise treatment efficacy from nonefficacy in the intervention arm of a randomized clinical trial.

Methods: Adolescent and young adult participants initiated a standardized aerobic exercise intervention within 14 d of concussion, consisting of self-selected exercise for 100 min·wk -1 at an individualized heart rate (80% of heart rate induced symptom exacerbation during graded exercise testing).

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This study compared lower extremity (LE) muscular strength by 3 groups of female athletes using chronological age and consideration of age of peak height velocity (PHV). Isometric quadriceps, hamstrings, and hip abductors strength were assessed from physically active, pediatric females. The body mass normalized isometric strength (N m/kg) was compared by the 3 age groups.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The 6th International Consensus Conference on Concussion in Sport, held in Amsterdam in 2022, focused on updated evidence and recommendations for managing sport-related concussions (SRC) in children and adolescents, emphasizing prevention strategies like mouthguard use and policy changes in sports.
  • - The conference highlighted the importance of the Sport Concussion Assessment Tools (SCAT) for diagnosing concussions within the first 72 hours, and the development of comprehensive evaluation tools for longer-term assessments, known as SCOAT6 for different age groups.
  • - Recommendations include early light physical activity instead of strict rest for recovery, targeted rehabilitation for persistent symptoms, and the recognition of varying impacts of SRC across diverse populations, while pointing out the limited utility of
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Objectives: To investigate the association of reported legal performance enhancing substance (PES) use and consideration of banned PES use among sport-specialised and non-sport-specialised young athletes.

Methods And Design: Cross-sectional study of 1049 young athletes enrolled in an injury prevention programme from 2013 to 2020. We used logistic regression modelling to determine the independent association between sports specialisation.

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Purpose: Over a 10-year time frame, this study aimed to evaluate diagnosis, treatment, and referral trends for adolescent runners seeking care for running-related injuries (RRIs) at a clinic that specializes in running medicine.

Methods: This study was a retrospective chart review of 392 adolescent runners (2,326 encounters) who sought care for RRIs between the years 2011 and 2021. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize clinical assessments, referrals, assistive devices, and medications prescribed or administered overall and by injury type.

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Background: Despite the increasing popularity of endurance running competitions among adolescent runners, there is currently limited information regarding expected biomechanical changes across the duration of a long-distance running event, and the relationship between young runners' biomechanics and running performance. Wearable technology offers an ecological means to continuously assess runners' biomechanical data during outdoor running competitions.

Research Question: Do adolescent athletes adopt changes in sensor-derived biomechanics throughout a marathon race, and are there relationships between race performance and biomechanical features among young marathoners?

Methods: Fourteen high-school aged runners (9 M, 5 F; age: 16 ± 1 years, height: 170.

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Context: Single- and dual-task walking gait assessments have been used to identify persistent movement and cognitive dysfunction among athletes with concussions. However, it is unclear whether previous ankle sprain injuries confound these outcomes during baseline testing. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of (1) ankle sprain history and (2) time since prior ankle sprain injury on single- and dual-task spatiotemporal gait outcomes and cognitive measures.

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