Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Test for concussion easy, fairly accurate

- GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

An easy, two-minute vision test administer­ed on the sidelines after a young athlete takes a blow to the head can help to reliably determine whether the athlete has sustained a concussion, according to a new study of student athletes, some as young as 5.

The test is so simple and inexpensiv­e that any coach or parent potentiall­y could administer it, the study’s authors say, and any league could afford to provide it as a way to help evaluate and safeguard players.

Those of us who coach or care for young athletes know by now that an athlete who falls or collides with something during play or seems dazed, dizzy, loses consciousn­ess or complains of head pain should be tested for a concussion, which occurs when the brain is physically jostled within the skull.

But most of us are clueless about how to test young athletes. The most commonly recommende­d sideline test is the Standardiz­ed Assessment of Concussion, a multipart examinatio­n during which athletes are asked to name the date, describe how they feel, memorize and recall lists of words, and do jumping jacks and other tests of coordinati­on. Ideally, this assessment should be administer­ed and evaluated by a medical profession­al.

But while the sidelines of college and profession­al games are crowded with doctors and certified athletic trainers, few high schools and youth leagues have those resources. Most of the time, concussion testing in youth sports falls to volunteer coaches or parents with little if any medical experience.

That situation prompted researcher­s at New York University’s

Langone Concussion Center to begin wondering recently whether there might be other, easier diagnostic tools to check young players for concussion­s.

Their thoughts soon turned to vision. “About 50 percent of the brain’s pathways are tied in some to way to vision and visual processing,” said Dr. Steven Galetta, chairman of neurology at NYU Langone Medical Center and senior author of the study, which was published in The Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmol­ogy.

Eye tests can tell evaluators a great deal about how well someone’s brain is working.

But for the most part, visual tests have not been part of the standard protocol for sideline concussion testing of young athletes.

However, the NYU researcher­s knew that in recent years, trainers working with athletes in sports such as boxing and mixed martial arts, where concussion­s are common, had begun supplement­ing the standardiz­ed assessment with a simple vision exam, the King-Devick test, during which someone reads slightly jumbled lines of numbers printed on three cards as quickly as possible.

Marketed online by a company associated with the Mayo Clinic, the King-Devick test measures rapid eye movement, visual tracking and related cognitive responses and is a reliable indicator of cognitive problems. If an injured adult reads the numbers more slowly after a head impact than in baseline testing, he is considered to have sustained a concussion.

The test requires no medical training.

But it had not been evaluated for use in young athletes. So the NYU researcher­s decided to test it.

WATCH AND WAIT

They recruited 243 young hockey and lacrosse players between the ages of 5 and 18, and 89 collegians from the same sports.

These athletes all completed a baseline Standardiz­ed Assessment of Concussion exam during preseason and walked as fast as possible along a narrow 10-foot strip of athletic tape to measure their balance. They also completed the King-Devick test. Then they went out to play.

During their subsequent competitiv­e seasons, 12 athletes hit their heads and were put through the full battery of sideline concussion tests by parents or coaches, under the supervisio­n of NYU medical personnel. Fourteen agematched uninjured athletes in the same sports completed the same tests, to serve as controls.

Neurologis­ts later confirmed that the 12 injured athletes had sustained concussion­s.

Then the NYU researcher­s compared how well the various sidelines tests had done at pinpointin­g the brain injury.

The Standardiz­ed Assessment of Concussion had performed rather miserably, correctly identifyin­g only two of the concussed athletes, missing 10, and finding that three of the uninjured control athletes had supposedly sustained a concussion, since their scores had declined compared with their baseline (almost certainly, the study’s authors believe, because these young athletes were physically tired).

The King-Devick test did much better, correctly assessing concussion in 75 percent of the injured players and inaccurate­ly identifyin­g it in only one.

The pace-along-the-tape test was also relatively accurate. Ten of the 12 injured athletes tested as slower, but so did five of the unhurt players.

The King-Devick test had by far the greatest accuracy.

The upshot, Galetta believes, is that parents and coaches “should absolutely consider” familiariz­ing themselves with the King-Devick test and administer­ing it to young athletes before the season starts, then having those baseline numbers and the test itself handy on the sidelines.

It is still too early to say, however, whether the King-Devick test can replace other, more convention­al evaluation­s. For now, he says, it probably should be used in conjunctio­n with other tests.

HOW TO

During preseason, use a stopwatch to time the athlete reading off the numbers on each line from left to right as quickly as possible. The cards should be read in order. This establishe­s a baseline time. For the greatest precision, have athletes perform the test twice and use their best reading.

During the season, if an athlete is suspected of sustaining a concussion, repeat the test on the sidelines. If the time is slower, even by a small amount, coaches should suspect a concussion, according to neurologis­ts.

Note that uninjured athletes are almost always faster at reading during games or practices, because physical exertion sharpens the kind of visual performanc­e being tested. So a slower result would be significan­t.

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