The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

CDC issues guidelines for child concussion­s

Guidance for parents, caregivers comes as trauma concern grows.

- By Ariel Hart ahart@ajc.com

Agency’s first-ever pediatric brain injury advice suggests there may be such a thing as too much rest.

Faced with more and more kids coming to emergency rooms for treatment of concussion­s, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued its first-ever guidance on how to deal with the condition in young patients.

Investigat­ive reporting on the long-term danger of head injury in sports, especially football and hockey, has spurred change within sports as well as the medical world. Georgia in 2013 passed a law pushed by the National Football League and the Atlanta Falcons that requires any student with a concussion to be removed from the field until a doctor says it’s safe.

Scientists are a long way from knowing exactly what head hits may be related down the road to chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, the dangerous degenerati­ve brain disease. Some are even concerned that the focus on concussion will divert attention from the smaller hits that may add up to triggering CTE.

But the CDC’s report was a place to start and one caregivers wanted to see.

“We have heard from health care providers that they want and need consistent, current and evidence-based guidance for diagnosing and managing mTBI (concussion),” said Dr. Deb Houry, the director of the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. “More than 800,000 children seek care for (traumatic brain injury) in U.S. emergency department­s each year, and until today, there was no evidence-based guideline in the United States on pediatric mTBI — inclusive of all causes,” she said.

The documentat­ion the CDC put together is also meant to

be helpful for coaches and schools, the authors said. Some of the agency’s advice:

■ Do not routinely image pediatric patients to diagnose mTBI.

■ There may be such a thing as too much rest. “Counsel patients and their parents/caregivers to return gradually to nonsports activities after no more than a 2-3 days of rest,” the CDC says.

■ Provide patients and their parents/caregivers with instructio­ns on returning to activity customized to their symptoms.

■ Adult diagnostic symptom scales may not work well for kids. Use validated, age-appropriat­e ones.

■ Assess for risk factors for prolonged recovery, including history of mTBI or other brain injury, severe symptom presentati­on immediatel­y after the injury, and personal characteri­stics and family history (such as learning difficulti­es and family and social stressors).

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