Concussed athletes walk slower than non-concussed athletes during cognitive-motor dual-task assessments but not during single-task assessments 2 months after sports concussion: a systematic review and meta-analysis using individual participant data.

Büttner F, Howell DR, Ardern CL, Doherty C, Blake C, Ryan J, Catena R, Chou LS, Fino P, Rochefort C, Sveistrup H, Parker T, Delahunt E. Br J Sports Med. 2019 Jul 22. pii: bjsports-2018-100164. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2018-100164. [Epub ahead of print] Review.

https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/2019/07/22/bjsports-2018-100164

Take Home Message

Dual-task walking tests (use of a cognitive task during walking) identify gait deficiencies after the usual clinical concussion recovery timeline (7-10 days) and help evaluate recovery after a sports concussion.

Summary

Clinicians have an array of tools to diagnose a concussion, including patient-reported symptoms, neurocognitive testing, and static postural balance. The accuracy of these tests to detect lingering deficits decreases as time passes after an initial injury. One solution may be a dual-task test, which mimics real life or athletic demands by requiring someone to perform a motor and cognitive task simultaneously. However, we lack large studies to help us learn how long these deficits last after an injury. Hence, the authors conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis using data for each participant in the studies to determine if patients after a concussion exhibit gait disturbances compared to non-injured participants. The researchers included studies if they had both participants with and without a concussion, a simple walking or static balance task paired with a cognitive task, and outcome variables related to gait biomechanics or balance. They then contacted the authors of each study to ask for the data from everyone in the published paper. The authors analyzed data for 516 participants with a concussion and 523 control participants from 26 eligible studies. Authors from 20 out of the 26 studies provided data for each participant. For the dual-task assessment protocols, only three studies used a static balance test for the motor task while most asked someone to walk at a self-selected pace on an 8 to 10 meter walkway. Among studies with data for each person, none of the participants performed a balance task. For the cognitive task, participants typically completed “question and answer” tasks (82% of studies). The authors found that participants with a concussion walked slower during single-task conditions up to one week after injury. During dual-task conditions, participants with a concussion had a decreased speed up to 2 months after the injury.

Viewpoints

The authors build on prior studies by showing that more complex tests, which stress multiple areas of the brain, may allow clinicians to understand how a patient is recovering after a concussion. While the authors found that several biomechanical parameters differed between participants with and without a concussion, they also noted that simply measuring walking time over a short distance while answering questions was enough to discern between groups. Additional validation in a clinical setting is necessary, but a test like this would be simple enough for clinicians to implement without bulky and expensive equipment. Because the differences were seen up to 2 months after injury, it suggests that athletes may not recover as quickly as previously thought and current clinical tests may fail to identify these differences. Despite insights from this study, the authors cautioned that they were unable to offer recommendations on which dual-tasks or measures to include in a clinical exam because of differences across studies. In the future, standardizing what outcomes are collected would make the dual-task test easier to implement into a clinical setting. Clinicians should be aware of the impairments in dual-task functioning after a concussion and how that may limit an athlete in their immediate return to sport and the months after an injury.

Question for Discussion

Should we implement dual-task testing at baseline concussion testing? What variables would you assess? What barriers are present to doing so besides time?

Written by: Karlee Burns
Reviewed by: Jeffrey Driban

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