Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms

The retrospective diagnosis of concussion is often missed by clinicians. We present a brief scale for retrospective assessment of the immediate concussion symptoms (ICS) to facilitate the diagnosis of patients without visible head injury or full loss of consciousness. We administered the scale to 9...

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Main Authors: Zack Zdenek Cernovsky, Paul Victor Fayez Istasy, Yves Bureau, Simon Chiu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Emerald Publishing 2018-12-01
Series:Mental Illness
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/mi/article/view/7901
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spelling doaj-7929ab38959d4073830161872f2089012020-11-25T03:59:43ZengEmerald PublishingMental Illness2036-74572036-74652018-12-0110210.4081/mi.2018.7901Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptomsZack Zdenek Cernovsky0Paul Victor Fayez Istasy1Yves Bureau2Simon Chiu3University of Western Ontario, London, OntarioUniversity of Western Ontario, London, OntarioUniversity of Western Ontario, London, OntarioUniversity of Western Ontario, London, Ontario The retrospective diagnosis of concussion is often missed by clinicians. We present a brief scale for retrospective assessment of the immediate concussion symptoms (ICS) to facilitate the diagnosis of patients without visible head injury or full loss of consciousness. We administered the scale to 90 survivors of car accidents (mean age 42.0, SD=13.6; 33 males, 57 females) at 2 to 33 months after their accident. Our scale consists of 6 items and these were endorsed by the following % of our respondents: feeling dazed (64.4% of our 90 respondents), stunned (73.3%), confused (70.0%), disoriented (62.2%), dizzy (57.8%), and loss of consciousness (22.2%). The statistical properties of the scale are satisfactory (Cronbach alpha = 0.74). The scale correlates with post-accident insomnia (r=0.28), depression (r=0.29), and also with Rivermead measure of the chronic post-concussion syndrome (r=0.34). The ICS scale could be used as a starting point in longitudinal research with brain imaging procedures to evaluate the stages of recovery from the initial concussion. Attached are the English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, Russian, and Czech versions of our scale. https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/mi/article/view/7901concussionpost-concussion syndromeRivermead scaletraumatic brain injury
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zack Zdenek Cernovsky
Paul Victor Fayez Istasy
Yves Bureau
Simon Chiu
spellingShingle Zack Zdenek Cernovsky
Paul Victor Fayez Istasy
Yves Bureau
Simon Chiu
Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms
Mental Illness
concussion
post-concussion syndrome
Rivermead scale
traumatic brain injury
author_facet Zack Zdenek Cernovsky
Paul Victor Fayez Istasy
Yves Bureau
Simon Chiu
author_sort Zack Zdenek Cernovsky
title Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms
title_short Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms
title_full Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms
title_fullStr Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms
title_full_unstemmed Scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms
title_sort scale for retrospective assessment of immediate concussion symptoms
publisher Emerald Publishing
series Mental Illness
issn 2036-7457
2036-7465
publishDate 2018-12-01
description The retrospective diagnosis of concussion is often missed by clinicians. We present a brief scale for retrospective assessment of the immediate concussion symptoms (ICS) to facilitate the diagnosis of patients without visible head injury or full loss of consciousness. We administered the scale to 90 survivors of car accidents (mean age 42.0, SD=13.6; 33 males, 57 females) at 2 to 33 months after their accident. Our scale consists of 6 items and these were endorsed by the following % of our respondents: feeling dazed (64.4% of our 90 respondents), stunned (73.3%), confused (70.0%), disoriented (62.2%), dizzy (57.8%), and loss of consciousness (22.2%). The statistical properties of the scale are satisfactory (Cronbach alpha = 0.74). The scale correlates with post-accident insomnia (r=0.28), depression (r=0.29), and also with Rivermead measure of the chronic post-concussion syndrome (r=0.34). The ICS scale could be used as a starting point in longitudinal research with brain imaging procedures to evaluate the stages of recovery from the initial concussion. Attached are the English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, Russian, and Czech versions of our scale.
topic concussion
post-concussion syndrome
Rivermead scale
traumatic brain injury
url https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/mi/article/view/7901
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