Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 10 of 11 items for :

  • "mild traumatic brain injury" x
  • Social Studies in Sport and Physical Activity x
  • Refine by Access: All Content x
Clear All
Restricted access

Is the Sky Falling? The Persistent Effects of Concussion

Steven P. Broglio

Sport concussion has been thrust into the national spotlight with growing concern over both the acute and chronic risk for injury. While much has been learned and applied to medical practice in the previous decade, how the injury may affect individuals years later remains largely unknown. The opaqueness of the unknown has led some to ask if certain sports should be banned. Without immediate answers, what is currently known must be extrapolated and the risks and benefits of sport participation must be balanced.

Restricted access

A Pediatric Perspective on Sport-Related Concussion

Tamara C. Valovich McLeod, Megan N. Houston, and Cailee E. Welch

Concussions resulting from sports and recreational activities are a significant concern in the pediatric population. The number of children and adolescents sustaining sport-related concussions is increasing and, as a result, legislation has been passed in all 50 states to ensure appropriate recognition and referral of pediatric athletes following concussion. The developing brain may make the diagnosis, assessment, and management of concussion more challenging for health care providers and requires the use of specific age-appropriate assessment tools. Concussion management must also include considerations for cognitive and physical rest, a collaborative concussion management team that includes medical and school personnel, and more conservative stepwise progressions for returning to school and to physical activity.

Restricted access

Psychology of Sport Concussions

Diane M. Wiese-Bjornstal, Andrew C. White, Hayley C. Russell, and Aynsley M. Smith

The psychology of sport concussions consists of psychological, psychiatric, and psychosocial factors that contribute to sport concussion risks, consequences, and outcomes. The purpose of this paper is to present a sport concussion-adapted version of the integrated model of psychological response to sport injury and rehabilitation (Wiese-Bjornstal, Smith, Shaffer, & Morrey, 1998) as a framework for understanding the roles of psychological, psychiatric, and psychosocial factors in sport concussions. Elements of this model include preinjury psychological risk factors, postinjury psychological response and rehabilitation processes, and postinjury psychological care components. Mapped onto each element of this model are findings from the research literature through a narrative review process. An important caveat is that the subjective nature of concussion diagnoses presents limitations in these findings. Future research should examine psychological contributors to concussion risk, influences of physical factors on psychological symptoms and responses, and efficacy of psychological treatments utilizing theory-driven approaches.

Restricted access

Concussion in Sport: Public, Professional and Critical Sociologies

Dominic Malcolm

, epidemiology has highlighted the social determinants of health and, most pertinently, the work conducted by the NFL’s Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Committee, against which former NFL players filed a law suit claiming that evidence identifying a link between playing the game and both short- and long

Restricted access

“Just Act Normal”: Concussion and the (Re)negotiation of Athletic Identity

Nikolaus A. Dean

“complex pathophysiological process affecting the brain, induced by traumatic biomechanical forces” and typically results from the “rapid onset of short lived impairments of neurological functions” ( McCrory et al., 2017 , p. 2). This mild traumatic brain injury is a common result of forceful contact with

Restricted access

CTE, Media, and the NFL: Framing a Public Health Crisis as a Football Epidemic

Yoon Heo

established the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury committee to examine the impact of head injuries on players. However, because of its connection to the NFL, the committee provided biased findings that conflicted with the findings of other research, and this brought up an ethical problem. A law was enacted in 2009

Restricted access

Concussion: A Window Into Brain–Movement Relations in Motor Control

Michael Gay and Semyon Slobounov

VTC at day 30 post-injury in subjects suffering from mild traumatic brain injuries. Interestingly, these subjects were clinically asymptomatic on the testing day, and no significant differences for any of the standard CoP-based measures of postural control (i.e., 90% ellipse CoP area, CoP velocity

Restricted access

Concussion in Youth Sport: Developmental Aspects

Tracey Covassin, Kyle M. Petit, and Morgan Anderson

, 771 – 775 . PubMed ID: 26378093 doi:10.1177/0009922815606417 10.1177/0009922815606417 Barrett , E.C. , McBurney , M.I. , & Ciappio , E.D. ( 2014 ). Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation as a potential therapeutic aid for the recovery from mild traumatic brain injury/concussion . Advances in

Restricted access

The Changing Landscape of Sport Concussion

Kevin M. Guskiewicz and Samuel R. Walton

.N. , … Hack , D.C. ( 2016 ). Time course and diagnostic accuracy of glial and neuronal blood biomarkers GFAP and UCH-L1 in a large cohort of trauma patients with and without mild traumatic brain injury . JAMA Neurology, 73 ( 5 ), 551 . PubMed ID: 27018834 doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2016.0039 10

Restricted access

The Gridiron’s Ethical Striping: Threads of Tackle Football’s Moral Permissibility

Francisco Javier López Frías

and CTE ( Belson, 2016 ). The progressive neurodegenerative disease results from brain cell damage produced by hits to the head, which scientists refer to as “mild traumatic brain injury,” and has severe life-changing symptoms, including memory loss, confusion, impaired judgment, impulse control