AI Article Synopsis

  • A study examined the frequency of clinical signs of sport-related concussions and the effectiveness of video diagnosis in professional rugby matches from 2012 to 2015.
  • The analysis involved 417 videos, leading to the observation of concussions primarily caused by head impacts during tackles, with various clinical signs being noted, including loss of consciousness and abnormal behavior.
  • Observers accurately diagnosed approximately 79.8% of concussions, highlighting the value of using video analysis as a supplementary tool for diagnosing concussions in sports.

Article Abstract

Objective: To describe the frequency of clinical signs and the accuracy of video diagnosis of sport-related concussion.

Design: An observational cross-sectional study.

Setting And Participants: Videos from a database of all suspected sport-related concussion in TOP14 matches (French professional male rugby Championship) were used, from 2012 to 2015 seasons. The videos were analyzed by 4 observers, blinded to the concussion diagnosis, after a training phase, and an inter-rater reliability analysis.

Interventions: N/A.

Main Outcome Measures: Video analysis for clinical signs and presumed diagnosis of sport-related concussion. The observer's diagnosis was compared with the team physicians' diagnosis.

Results: Four hundred seventeen videos were analyzed with 142 concussed players. Sport-related concussions happened mostly from an impact to the head (seen by the observers in 98.4%), against an opponent (73.2%), and during a tackle (74.6%). Video signs were observable in 98.6% for suspected loss of consciousness, tonic posturing (95%), ataxia (77.2%), dazed look (35.7%), abnormal behavior (18.2%), and seizures (96.2%). Ataxia was seen in 77.7% of concussed players, suspected loss of consciousness in 61.4%, dazed look in 63.2%, abnormal behavior in 55%, and tonic posturing in 7.1%. The observers diagnosed 79.8% of concussions.

Conclusions: We described the frequency of video clinical signs of sport-related concussion, with a good accuracy of the blinded observers for the diagnosis. This emphasizes the importance of pitch-side video analysis as an extra tool for sport-related concussion diagnosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/JSM.0000000000000928DOI Listing

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