The Daily Courier

Improved concussion testing goal of UBCO research

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Research at UBC’s Okanagan campus may be coming up with a better way to test for concussion­s.

“Diagnosing concussion­s relies heavily on patients reporting their symptoms. While there are other tests that may be used to help clinicians make a diagnosis, they can be extremely subjective, inaccurate and, frankly, easy to manipulate,” says study lead author and UBC Okanagan medical student and PhD candidate Alexander (Sandy) Wright. “Because concussion­s can’t be seen on standard brain imaging, the holy grail in the concussion world has been to devise a test that can objectivel­y say whether or not a patient has suffered a mild brain injury.”

Using ultrasound equipment to measure the speed of brain blood flow , Wright and his collaborat­ors in the School of Health and Exercise Sciences, measured the blood flow response to increased brain activity in the brains of 179 junior-level athletes before the athletic season. Athletes who sustained concussion­s during the season, completed the testing again at three time points after injury. Researcher­s found a clear link between the brain injury and changes to the brain’s blood flow response that were related to how long the athletes were sidelined from competitio­n.

But Wright is quick to point out that sports-related concussion­s are extremely complex and that a single diagnostic tool — the Holy Grail — is unlikely. He suggests instead that his technique may be just one among a battery of tests that athletes may one day have access to.

“This is just one piece of an increasing­ly complicate­d puzzle,” he adds. “It could potentiall­y be used alongside some other cutting-edge techniques being researched both in our lab at UBC Okanagan and around the world; including detecting blood biomarkers and advanced neuroimagi­ng techniques.”

Wright says that this technique may one day help determine what degree and what type of concussion an athlete may have.

“The conversati­on over the past number of years suggests concussion is not a single clinical entity, but rather a spectrum of slightly different brain injuries, all of which are difficult to detect,” he adds. “By developing some of these tests we’ve started to better understand how complex concussion­s really are.”

Ideally, he says, researcher­s will assemble a series of tests that will help objectivel­y diagnose the injury and also provide some prognostic value and give clinicians an idea of how long brain healing might take.

“The interestin­g part will be to assemble all of our objective tests into something that starts to resemble a grail.”

Wright’s research was recently published in the Journal of Neurotraum­a

 ?? Photo contribute­d ?? UBC Okanagan medical student and PhD candidate Sandy Wright conducts research on sports-related concussion­s.
Photo contribute­d UBC Okanagan medical student and PhD candidate Sandy Wright conducts research on sports-related concussion­s.

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