Effects of hours of sleep on ImPACT concussion testing: comparing baseline with postinjury scores.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-05-03 Print Date: 2024-08-01 DOI:10.3171/2024.2.PEDS23437
Eugene I Hrabarchuk, Roshini Kalagara, Bahie Ezzat, Frederika Rentzeperis, Tomasina M Leska, Alexander J Schupper, Benjamin Rodriguez, Muhammad Ali, Addison Quinones, Lily McCarthy, Mathew T Carr, Arielle B Lehman, Alex Gometz, Mark Lovell, Tanvir F Choudhri
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Abstract

Objective: The influence of sleep on baseline and postconcussion neurocognitive performance prior to Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT) is poorly understood. Since ImPACT is widely used in youth sport to assess neurocognitive performance before and after head injury, it is important to delineate factors that affect testing performance. While some have reported correlations between fewer hours of sleep and lower scores on baseline tests, others have not observed any such associations. Therefore, the authors sought to compare the relationship between sleep and neurocognitive performance on ImPACT at both baseline and postinjury.

Methods: The authors queried a database of 25,815 ImPACT tests taken from 2009 to 2019 by athletes aged 12-22 years. There were 11,564 baseline concussion tests and 7446 postinjury concussion ImPACT tests used in the analysis. Linear regression was used to model the effect of sleep on baseline and postconcussion ImPACT scores adjusting for sex, age, learning disability, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, number of prior concussions, number of games missed, and strenuous exercise before testing.

Results: Mean composite scores expectedly were all significantly lower in the post-head injury group compared with the baseline group. In the multivariable analysis, at baseline, hours of sleep significantly affected symptom scores (β = -1.050, 95% CI -1.187 to -0.9138; p < 0.0001). In the postinjury multivariable analysis, verbal memory (β = 0.4595, 95% CI 0.2080-0.7110; p = 0.0003), visual memory (β = 0.3111, 95% CI 0.04463-0.5777; p = 0.0221), impulse control (β = -0.2321, 95% CI -0.3581 to -0.1062; p = 0.0003), and symptom scores (β = -0.9168, 95% CI -1.259 to -0.5750; p < 0.0001) were all affected by hours of sleep.

Conclusions: Hours of sleep did not alter neurocognitive metrics at baseline but did have an impact on post-head injury metrics. These findings suggest that individuals may be able to compensate for lack of sleep at baseline but not immediately after concussion. Concussions may reduce cognitive reserve or detract from the brain's resources, making sleep even more important for proper neurocognitive functioning postconcussion. Future work will analyze the effects of sleep on postconcussion test performance.

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睡眠时间对 ImPACT 脑震荡测试的影响:比较基线分数和受伤后分数。
目的:人们对脑震荡后即时评估和认知测试(ImPACT)前睡眠对基线和脑震荡后神经认知能力的影响知之甚少。由于 ImPACT 被广泛应用于青少年体育运动中,以评估头部受伤前后的神经认知能力,因此确定影响测试成绩的因素非常重要。虽然有些报告称睡眠时间较少与基线测试得分较低之间存在关联,但其他报告并未观察到任何此类关联。因此,作者试图比较基线测试和受伤后 ImPACT 测试中睡眠与神经认知能力之间的关系:作者在数据库中查询了 2009 年至 2019 年期间 12-22 岁运动员进行的 25815 次 ImPACT 测试。分析中使用了11564次基线脑震荡测试和7446次伤后脑震荡ImPACT测试。线性回归用于模拟睡眠对基线和脑震荡后 ImPACT 分数的影响,并对性别、年龄、学习障碍、注意力缺陷/多动障碍、先前脑震荡次数、缺席比赛次数和测试前剧烈运动进行了调整:与基线组相比,头部受伤后组的平均综合得分明显较低。在多变量分析中,基线时的睡眠时间对症状评分有明显影响(β = -1.050, 95% CI -1.187 to -0.9138;P < 0.0001)。在受伤后的多变量分析中,言语记忆(β = 0.4595,95% CI 0.2080-0.7110; p = 0.0003)、视觉记忆(β = 0.3111,95% CI 0.04463-0.5777; p = 0.0221)、冲动控制(β = -0.2321, 95% CI -0.3581 to -0.1062; p = 0.0003)和症状评分(β = -0.9168, 95% CI -1.259 to -0.5750; p < 0.0001)都受到睡眠时间的影响:结论:睡眠时间不会改变基线神经认知指标,但会影响头部受伤后的指标。这些研究结果表明,人在基线睡眠不足时可能会得到补偿,但脑震荡后则不会立即得到补偿。脑震荡可能会降低认知储备或减少大脑资源,因此睡眠对脑震荡后神经认知功能的正常发挥更为重要。今后的工作将分析睡眠对脑震荡后测试成绩的影响。
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来源期刊
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
10.50%
发文量
307
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Information not localiced
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