학술논문

Using Accelerometers to Record Postural Sway in Adolescents With Concussion: A Cross-Sectional Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Athletic Training (Allen Press); Dec2018, Vol. 53 Issue 12, p1166-1172, 7p, 5 Charts, 1 Graph
Subject
Data analysis
Adolescence
Accelerometers
Amnesia
Analysis of variance
Brain concussion
Cognition disorders
Dizziness
Postural balance
Headache
Posture
Research funding
Scale analysis (Psychology)
Standing position
Statistics
Task performance
Repeated measures design
Cross-sectional method
Data analysis software
Descriptive statistics
Glasgow Coma Scale
Mann Whitney U Test
Symptoms
Language
ISSN
10626050
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the magnitude of postural sway induced by different balance tasks in adolescents with concussion and to examine the associations of postural sway with concussion symptoms. Design: Cross-sectional study. Patients or Other Participants: Fifty-six adolescents (20 girls, 36 boys) between 13 and 17 years of age who sustained a concussion within the past 44 days and were still symptomatic. Main Outcome Measure(s): Anterior-posterior postural sway was measured using an accelerometer attached to the participant's lower back while he or she performed 6 staticbalance tasks that varied the visual input, type of surface, and foot stance. Participants self-reported symptoms that occurred at the time of the concussion (eg, dizziness, confusion, amnesia) as well as at the time of balance testing (eg, eye and head movement--induced dizziness). Results: The normalized path length of postural sway during the different balance tasks was greater with the eyes closed (mean = 19.3 mG/s) compared with the eyes open (mean = 12.4 mG/s; P, .001). Furthermore, sway while standing with the feet together on a foam surface (mean = 17.9 mG/s) or while tandem standing on a firm surface (mean = 19.4 mG/s) was greater than sway while standing with the feet together on a firm surface (mean = 10.3 mG/s; P < .001). Greater sway was associated with dizziness and confusion reported at the time of injury (P, .05). Dizziness and headache symptoms at rest were positively correlated with sway (P < .05). Conclusions: Using accelerometers to measure postural sway during different challenging balance conditions in adolescents with concussion may provide an objective means of quantifying balance impairments in clinical environments. Furthermore, the association of these measurements with symptoms suggests a need to account for symptom severity at the time of testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]