Concussion disrupts brain synchrony: Evidence from interactive metronome on young children with persisting symptoms and prolonged recovery post-concussion

Silvia Bonacina, Nina Kraus, Jennifer Krizman, Jacob Farley, Trent Nicol, Cynthia R LaBella
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Abstract

Objective Concussions cause microstructural damage, which we hypothesize leads to a lack of synchrony in the brain. Interactive Metronome (IM) behaviorally assesses how well an individual can maintain a steady rhythm under both unsupervised (absence of feedback) and supervised (presence of visual feedback) conditions. If concussion causes dyssynchrony, then we predict that children with concussion do worse on IM than healthy children and that the difficulty should be greatest during the unsupervised condition, when the children must self-regulate their rhythm performance. Setting and Participants Seventy-four children and adolescents (age range 8–17 years) were assessed on IM across two different tasks (unsupervised – “no feedback” and supervised – “visual feedback”) during a clinic visit after their concussion injury and diagnosis. Design and Main Measures We compared the participants with concussion to a healthy control group (N = 73, age range 15–19 years) with respect to their ability to clap on time with a steady beat using IM, calculated as ms off the beat, separately for the unsupervised and supervised conditions. Results Results reveal participants with concussion struggled to maintain a steady rhythm compared to the control group, particularly during the unsupervised condition. Conclusion These results support the hypothesis that concussion can give rise to brain dyssynchrony. IM captures this dysfunction and, we suggest rhythmic training has the potential to re-establish synchronization among neural networks that may be compromised after a concussion. Interventional studies are a necessary next step for testing the efficacy of IM training to accelerate concussion recovery.
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脑震荡扰乱大脑同步:来自互动节拍器对脑震荡后持续症状和长时间恢复的幼儿的证据
目的脑震荡会导致微结构损伤,我们推测这可能导致大脑缺乏同步性。交互式节拍器(IM)行为评估个体在无监督(没有反馈)和有监督(有视觉反馈)条件下保持稳定节奏的程度。如果脑震荡导致非同步性,那么我们预测脑震荡儿童在IM上的表现比健康儿童差,并且在无监督的情况下困难最大,此时儿童必须自我调节他们的节奏表现。74名儿童和青少年(年龄范围8-17岁)在脑震荡损伤和诊断后的诊所就诊期间,通过两种不同的任务(无监督-“无反馈”和有监督-“视觉反馈”)对IM进行了评估。设计和主要措施我们将脑震荡参与者与健康对照组(N = 73,年龄范围15-19岁)进行比较,比较他们在无监督和有监督条件下使用IM(以节拍差毫秒计算)按时拍掌的能力。结果显示,与对照组相比,脑震荡参与者难以保持稳定的节奏,尤其是在无人监督的情况下。结论这些结果支持了脑震荡可导致大脑非同步化的假设。IM捕捉到了这种功能障碍,我们认为有节奏的训练有可能在脑震荡后受损的神经网络之间重新建立同步。介入研究是测试IM训练加速脑震荡恢复效果的必要下一步。
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