The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Playing with concussion doubles recovery time

- By The Associated Press

Continuing to play despite a concussion doubles recovery time for teen athletes and leads to worse short-term mental function than in those immediatel­y removed from action, a study found.

CHICAGO » Continuing to play despite a concussion doubles recovery time for teen athletes and leads to worse short-term mental function than in those immediatel­y removed from action, a study found.

It’s billed as the first to compare recovery outcomes for athletes removed from a game or practice compared with those who aren’t. The study was small, involving 69 teens treated at a University of Pittsburgh Medical Center concussion clinic, but the results bolster evidence supporting the growing number of return-toplay laws and policies nationwide

The study was published Monday in the journal Pediatrics.

The study involved athletes aged 15 on average from several sports, including football, soccer, ice hockey and basketball who had concussion­s during a game or practice. Half continued to play and took 44 days on average to recover from symptoms, versus 22 days in those who were immediatel­y sidelined.

Sidelined players reported symptoms immediatel­y, including dizziness, headaches, mental fogginess and fatigue, and were diagnosed with concussion­s by trainers or team physicians. The others, who continued playing for 19 minutes on average, delayed reporting symptoms and were diagnosed later.

Those who continued to play had worse scores on mental function tests performed eight days after the concussion and 30 days after the concussion. Medical records showed mental function had been similar in all players before their concussion­s.

Return-to-play policies are widespread, especially in youth athletics, and they typically recommend sidelining players after a suspected concussion until symptoms resolve. One of the main reasons is to prevent a rare condition called second-impact syndrome — potentiall­y fatal brain swelling or bleeding that can occur when a player still recovering from a concussion gets hit again in the head.

The study results show that a prolonged recovery is another important risk from returning to play too soon — one that “no one had really calculated” until now, said Dr. Allen Sills, a Vanderbilt University neurosurge­on. He was not involved in the research.

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