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A dangerous jolt
International New York Times
Last Updated IST
AT RISK Young brains are particularly susceptible to injury in athletics.
AT RISK Young brains are particularly susceptible to injury in athletics.

Recent attention to long-term brain damage linked to multiple concussions among professional football players has prompted a much closer look at how children and adolescents who participate in sports can be protected from similar consequences.

And with good reason. The young brain is especially susceptible to concussion, and sports-related concussions account for more than half of all emergency room visits by children ages 8 through 13, according to the National Athletic Trainers’ Association.

A child who suffers a concussion is one and a half times more likely to have
another, and those who have had two concussions have a threefold greater risk of the same injury happening again. Many parents wonder if it is wise to let their
children participate in sports like football and soccer, in which head injuries are most common. At the same time, misconceptions among parents and coaches abound about the seriousness of concussions and how best to prevent them, especially for players who often think they are invincible and say they feel fine, so they can get back in the game.

Studies have found that more than 50 per cent of high school athletes and 70 per cent of college athletes failed to report concussions they had suffered while
playing football. But first, it is worth noting that almost no sport is free of a concussion hazard, and that participating in sports has “cognitive, physical, emotional and social benefits that outweigh everything,” said Steven P Broglio, director of the Neurotrauma Research Lab at the University of Michigan and the lead author of the National Athletic Trainers’ Association position statement on how best to deal with concussions among young athletes.

For far too long, concussions have been minimised, with youngsters who have
suffered one often going back into the game much sooner than they should, sometimes on the very day they are injured. Experts say that even the language commonly used to describe a hit — like “ding” or “bell ringer” — minimises the seriousness of the injury and should be abandoned.

Perhaps concussions would command greater respect if they were called by their proper medical term: mild traumatic brain injuries. A concussion is caused by a direct or indirect blow to the head. The brain is jostled against an unyielding skull,
temporarily disrupting normal neurological and metabolic functions. Contrary to popular belief, you don’t have to lose consciousness to have suffered a concussion. Ninety per cent of concussions involve no loss of consciousness or only a brief disruption of mental alertness. You don’t even have to hit your head – a whiplash injury can cause one.

Furthermore, the usual five-minute assessment done on the sideline to check an injured athlete’s ability to orient, remember, concentrate and recall words “misses about 40 per cent of concussions,” Steven said in an interview. “A single test is not diagnostic and should not be relied on. Multiple different tests taken together can increase the sensitivity to the mid- to upper 90s.”

However, the time allotted to assess an injured athlete on the sideline is often inadequate to determine whether it is safe for a player to return, Steven said. One of the most dangerous effects of failing to detect a concussion and allowing time for a young athlete to recover is second-impact syndrome — rapid, catastrophic swelling of the brain that can cause lifelong impairments, coma and even death — should the athlete have another concussion.

Weighing risks
A growing number of parents now weigh the risks of concussion when helping their children decide which sport to pursue. The Institute of Medicine and the National
Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences reported in 2012 that tackle football players suffered the most concussions among high-school-age athletes, with 11.2 reported among 10,000 “athletic exposures” — the number of practices and games in which an athlete participates. Lacrosse was the next riskiest, with 6.9 concussions per 10,000 athletic exposures although one recent study found ice
hockey and wrestling to be more hazardous than lacrosse.

Among girls, soccer is associated with the highest risk — 6.7 concussions per 10,000 athletic exposures, according to the academy study. Although many focus on the hazards of heading the ball, a new study of high school soccer players found that contact with another player was by far the most frequent cause of concussions among female and male players.

The study’s authors, from the University of Colorado School of Public Health,
predicted that “banning heading is unlikely to eliminate athlete-athlete contact or the resultant injuries.” They noted that soccer had become a much more physical sport in recent years, resulting in more collisions between players. Girls’ basketball is not far behind, with 5.6 concussions per 10,000 exposures, a rate twice that of boys’ basketball.

Gymnastics has had a sharp rise in concussions in recent years. As the USA Gymnastics organization pointed out last year, “a concussion can be caused by a hit to the body, not just the head.” Its statement added, “A gymnast could fall, have a whiplash type movement and sustain a concussion even though they didn’t hit their head.” The lowest concussion rate is associated with swimming, with only 0.2 such injuries per 10,000 exposures among girls and 0.1 among boys who swim competitively, according to a 2012 study in The American Journal of Sports Medicine.
Every athlete, parent and coach should be familiar with the signs and symptoms of concussion, some of which may show up hours or days after the injury. The athletic trainers’ report includes these:

Difficulty thinking clearly, concentrating or remembering new information.
Headache, blurry vision, queasiness or vomiting, dizziness or balance problems or sensitivity to noise or light.
Irritability, moodiness, sadness or nervousness.
Excessive sleepiness or difficulty falling asleep or remaining asleep.

Any of these should be reported without delay to a coach, athletic trainer, parent or school nurse. Especially worrisome is a symptom that worsens with time. So, an athlete should be evaluated and cleared by a health care provider trained to do so before returning.

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(Published 31 August 2015, 22:40 IST)