Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer Player

Athletes are known to under-report concussion symptoms due to competitive disincentives to report and conflation of concussion symptoms with other conditions associated with rigorous participation in sports. A quantitative biomarker for concussion has the potential to decrease the reliance on incons...

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Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mary Ann Liebert 2020-09-01
Series:Neurotrauma Reports
Online Access:https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/NEUR.2020.0003
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spelling doaj-939bf1d273c34027b7db51320865c3c62020-12-03T02:55:24ZengMary Ann LiebertNeurotrauma Reports2689-288X2020-09-0110.1089/NEUR.2020.0003Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer PlayerAthletes are known to under-report concussion symptoms due to competitive disincentives to report and conflation of concussion symptoms with other conditions associated with rigorous participation in sports. A quantitative biomarker for concussion has the potential to decrease the reliance on inconsistent patient-reported symptoms for the diagnosis of concussion. The objective of this project was to monitor heart rate variability (HRV) patterns of in-season athletes as a potential biomarker for concussion. Twenty in-season National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division 2 collegiate soccer players were given a wristband heart rate sensor with instructions to wear the band full time (24/7) for the entire fall season (approximately 3 months). The athletes were prompted by email to complete a weekly survey on the severity and frequency of any concussion symptoms. The survey and HRV data were de-identified for confidentiality, and to increase the likelihood of accurate reporting the athletes were told their responses would not be used to disqualify them from athletics. Our hypothesis was that HRV would be diminished in those with recent concussion. One athlete (5% of the cohort) sustained a concussion during the study period. A marked decrease in HRV was identified 7 days following the concussion, which eventually returned to baseline. This normalization of HRV followed the timing of resolution of concussion symptoms. Participants who did not sustain a concussion exhibited minimal variance in HRV over time. This preliminary study shows that HRV has potential as a biomarker for symptom resolution after clinically apparent concussion. HRV is unlikely to serve as a concussion diagnostic due to the 7-day lag in HRV change after concussion.https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/NEUR.2020.0003
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
title Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer Player
spellingShingle Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer Player
Neurotrauma Reports
title_short Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer Player
title_full Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer Player
title_fullStr Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer Player
title_full_unstemmed Change in Heart Rate Variability after Concussion in a Collegiate Soccer Player
title_sort change in heart rate variability after concussion in a collegiate soccer player
publisher Mary Ann Liebert
series Neurotrauma Reports
issn 2689-288X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Athletes are known to under-report concussion symptoms due to competitive disincentives to report and conflation of concussion symptoms with other conditions associated with rigorous participation in sports. A quantitative biomarker for concussion has the potential to decrease the reliance on inconsistent patient-reported symptoms for the diagnosis of concussion. The objective of this project was to monitor heart rate variability (HRV) patterns of in-season athletes as a potential biomarker for concussion. Twenty in-season National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division 2 collegiate soccer players were given a wristband heart rate sensor with instructions to wear the band full time (24/7) for the entire fall season (approximately 3 months). The athletes were prompted by email to complete a weekly survey on the severity and frequency of any concussion symptoms. The survey and HRV data were de-identified for confidentiality, and to increase the likelihood of accurate reporting the athletes were told their responses would not be used to disqualify them from athletics. Our hypothesis was that HRV would be diminished in those with recent concussion. One athlete (5% of the cohort) sustained a concussion during the study period. A marked decrease in HRV was identified 7 days following the concussion, which eventually returned to baseline. This normalization of HRV followed the timing of resolution of concussion symptoms. Participants who did not sustain a concussion exhibited minimal variance in HRV over time. This preliminary study shows that HRV has potential as a biomarker for symptom resolution after clinically apparent concussion. HRV is unlikely to serve as a concussion diagnostic due to the 7-day lag in HRV change after concussion.
url https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/NEUR.2020.0003
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